Critical Race Theory, Fourth Edition: An Introduction [4 ed.] 1479818259, 9781479818259

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Table of contents :
CONTENTS
FOREWORD
PREFACE TO THE FOURTH EDITION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I INTRODUCTION
II HALLMARK CRITICAL RACE THEORY THEMES
III LEGAL STORYTELLING AND NARRATIVE ANALYSIS
IV LOOKING INWARD
V POWER AND THE SHAPE OF KNOWLEDGE
VI CRITIQUES AND RESPONSES TO CRITICISM
VII CRITICAL RACE THEORY TODAY
VIII CONCLUSION
GLOSSARY OF TERMS
INDEX
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
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CRITICAL RACE THEORY

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Critical America

General Editors: Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic Recent titles in the Critical America series include: The First Amendment in Cross-­Cultural Perspective: A Comparative Legal Analysis of the Freedom of Speech Ronald J. Krotoszynski, Jr. Feminist Legal Theory: A Primer Nancy Levit and Robert R. M. Verchick The Emergence of Mexican America: Recovering Stories of Mexican Peoplehood in U.S. Culture John-­Michael Rivera Law and Class in America: Trends since the Cold War Edited by Paul D. Carrington and Trina Jones The Sense of Justice: Empathy in Law and Punishment Markus Dirk Dubber No Seat at the Table: How Corporate Governance and Law Keep Women Out of the Boardroom Douglas M. Branson White by Law: The Legal Construction of Race, Revised Edition Ian Haney López Opening the Floodgates: Why America Needs to Rethink Its Borders and Immigration Laws Kevin R. Johnson

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The Reproductive Rights Reader: Law, Medicine, and the Construction of Motherhood Edited by Nancy Ehrenreich Chicano Students and the Courts: The Mexican American Legal Struggle for Educational Equality Richard R. Valencia Whitewashed: America’s Invisible Middle Eastern Minority John Tehranian American Exceptionalism and International Order Natsu Taylor Saito Critical Race Theory: An Introduction, Fourth Edition Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic For a complete list of titles in the series, please visit the New York University Press website at www.nyupress.org.

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CRITICAL R ACE THEORY An Introduction Fourth Edition

R I C H A R D D E L G A D O and J E A N S T E FA N C I C Foreword by Angela Harris

NEW YORK UNIVERSIT Y PRESS New York

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NEW YORK UNIVERSIT Y PRESS New York www.nyupress.org © 2023 by New York University All rights reserved Please contact the Library of Congress for Cataloging-in-Publication data. ISBN: 9781479818242 (hardback) ISBN: 9781479818259 (paperback) ISBN: 9781479818297 (library ebook) ISBN: 9781479818266 (consumer ebook) New York University Press books are printed on acid-­free paper, and their binding materials are chosen for strength and durability. We strive to use environmentally responsible suppliers and materials to the greatest extent possible in publishing our books. Manufactured in the United States of America 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Also available as an ebook

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Some people see things as they are and say, why? I dream things that never were and say, why not? —­R obert F. Kennedy, quoting George Bernard Shaw In order to get beyond racism, we must first take account of race. There is no other way. —­J ustice Harry Blackmun

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CONTENTS

Foreword by Angela Harris . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xiii Preface to the Fourth Edition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xix Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xxiii

I. INTRODUCTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1



A. What Is Critical Race Theory? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3



B. Early Origins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4



C. Relationship to Previous Movements . . . . . . . . . . . 4



D. Principal Figures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6



E. Spin-­Off Movements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

F. Basic Tenets of Critical Race Theory . . . . . . . . . . . 8



G. How Much Racism Is There in the World? . . . . . . 11



H. Organization of This Book . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Questions and Comments for Chapter I . . . . . . . . . 16 Suggested Readings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17





II. HALLMARK CRITICAL R ACE THEORY THEMES . . . . . . . .19

A. Interest Convergence, Material Determinism, and Racial Realism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20



B. Revisionist History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25



C. Critique of Liberalism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26



D. Structural Determinism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31



1. Tools of Thought and the Dilemma of Law Reform . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 ix

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x  Contents



2. The Empathic Fallacy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Classroom Exercise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36



3. Serving Two Masters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37



4. Race Remedies Law as a Homeostatic Device . . . 39

Classroom Exercise: Who Should Call the Shots? . . . . 38 Questions and Comments for Chapter II . . . . . . . . 41 Suggested Readings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43



III. LEGAL STORY TELLING AND NARR ATIVE ANALYSIS . . . . .45

A. Opening a Window onto Ignored or Alternative Realities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48



B. Counterstorytelling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51



C. Cure for Silencing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52



D. Storytelling in Court . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54



E. Storytelling on the Defensive . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Questions and Comments for Chapter III . . . . . . . . 56 Suggested Readings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58





IV. LOOKING INWARD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59

A. Intersectionality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59



B. Essentialism and Antiessentialism . . . . . . . . . . . 64



C. Nationalism versus Assimilation . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 Classroom Exercise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71



D. Racial Mixture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 Questions and Comments for Chapter IV . . . . . . . . 73 Suggested Readings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75



V. POWER AND THE SHAPE OF KNOWLEDGE . . . . . . . . . . 77



A. The Black-­White Binary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77



B. Critical White Studies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85

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C ontents  x i

Classroom Exercise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92

C. Other Developments: Latino and Asian Critical Thought, Critical Race Feminism, LGBTQ Theory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93 Questions and Comments for Chapter V . . . . . . . . 98 Suggested Readings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100



VI. CRITIQUES AND RESPONSES TO CRITICISM . . . . . . . . 102



A. “External” Criticism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102



1. Early Critiques . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102



2. Trump and His Followers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104



B. “Internal” Criticism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106



1. The Activist Critiques . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107



2. Critique of the Intellectual Heart of the Movement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108



C. Critical Race Theory as a Method of Inquiry in New Fields and Countries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 Classroom Exercise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 Questions and Comments for Chapter VI . . . . . . . 112 Suggested Readings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114

VII. CRITICAL R ACE THEORY TODAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115



A. Right-­Wing Offensive . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115

B. Front-­Burner Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116

1. Race, Class, Welfare, and Poverty . . . . . . . . . . 117



2. Policing and Criminal Justice . . . . . . . . . . . . 122



3. Hate Speech, Language Rights, and School Curricula . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127



4. Affirmative Action and Color Blindness . . . . . . 132



5. Globalization and Immigration . . . . . . . . . . . 138

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x ii  Contents



6. Voting Rights . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142



C. Identity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 143 Classroom Exercise: Panel on the Intersection of Race and Body Image . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145



D. Critical Empirical Analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146 Questions and Comments for Chapter VII . . . . . . . 149 Suggested Readings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152

VIII. CONCLUSION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154



A. The Future . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154



B. A Critical Race Agenda for the New Century . . . . . 156



C. Likely Responses to the Critical Race Theory Movement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159



1. Critical Race Theory Becomes the New Civil Rights Orthodoxy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159



2. Critical Race Theory Marginalized and Ignored . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160



3. Critical Race Theory Analyzed but Rejected . . . 161



4. Partial Incorporation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161 Classroom Exercise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 163 Questions and Comments for Chapter VIII . . . . . . 164 Suggested Readings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165 Glossary of Terms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167 Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 189 About the Authors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199

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FOREWORD Angela Harris

In 1982 I was a graduate student in social science at the University of Chicago. I lived at International House, among a vibrant community of American students from African American, Latina/o, South Asian, and other backgrounds, as well as foreign students from Asia, Europe, Africa, and the Americas. We protested and picketed over sanctions for the South African apartheid regime. We saw Michael Jackson moonwalking for the first time on television. Our Black male friends got stopped by the police for looking like members of the impoverished African American community that surrounded Hyde Park. We read books in which feminists attacked Freud and Third World women talked back to First World pieties. And we fought with the university administration over our demands for more programs, more resources, and more support for students of color on campus. In 1983 I was a first-­year law student at the University of Chicago. In my entering class of roughly 180 students, there were four African American students, including myself; one Asian American student; and two Latinos. All of our professors were white, and all but two were male. x iii

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x i v  Foreword

Even more disorienting, however, than mere demographics was the fact that the lively discourse on racial-­ethnic relations, both domestic and international, was gone. None of my professors talked about race or ethnicity; it was apparently irrelevant to the law. None of my professors in the first year talked about feminism or the concerns of women, either. These concerns were also, apparently, irrelevant. Nowhere, in fact, did the cases and materials we read address concerns of group inequality, sexual difference, or cultural identity. There was only one Law, a law that in its universal majesty applied to everyone without regard to race, color, gender, or creed. Disoriented and unsure of ourselves, a few of us felt that something was profoundly missing in our education, though we could not articulate what the missing something was. We went outside the classroom to look for it. Some of us went to work for the Mandel Legal Aid Clinic. Some of us successfully agitated to get Professor Catharine MacKinnon, the pathbreaking feminist legal scholar, invited to speak (though not invited to join the faculty). Some of us even succeeded in getting permission for Professor Mary Becker to teach a seminar in feminist jurisprudence (though the dean asked us, somewhat bewilderedly, whether men would be excluded from the reading list). In reading groups we began to explore the literature of critical legal studies. But there seemed to be no critical literature on race and the law. There was, of course, law that had a lot to do with the lives of some communities of color: poverty law, welfare law, criminal law, immigration law. But there was, seemingly, no

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Foreword  x v

language in which to embark on a race-­based, systematic critique of legal reasoning and legal institutions themselves. As first-­year, then second-­year, then third-­year law students, we had no inkling of the struggles going on at Harvard Law School over the work and teachings of Derrick Bell or of the few scholars—­one coauthor of this book among them—­who had begun to apply the tools of critical theory to the law. We finished our legal educations never having found a place where the sophisticated discourse of racial critique in which we lived our everyday lives could enter the legal canon. Three years after I got my law degree, in the summer of 1989, I was a first-­year law teacher invited to attend the first-­ ever workshop on something called “critical race theory,” to be held at the St. Benedict Center in Madison, Wisconsin. At that workshop, I discovered what had been missing for me as a student. I met some of the people who, by then, had begun to be recognized across the nation as major intellectual figures: Derrick Bell, Kimberlé Crenshaw, Richard Delgado, Mari Matsuda, Patricia Williams. And I discovered a community of scholars who were inventing a language and creating a literature that was unlike anything I had read for class in three years of law school. As we enter the twenty-­first century, critical race theory is no longer new, but it continues to grow and thrive. The community has expanded: scholars not only from the United States but from countries including Canada, Australia, England, India, and Spain now work within the discipline of critical race theory. The literature has grown in breadth and depth: as this book indicates, not only race-­crits but also

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x v i  Foreword

queer-­crits, LatCrits, and critical race feminists seek to reveal and challenge the practices of subordination facilitated and permitted by legal discourse and legal institutions. And, finally, the audience has grown. Critical race theory has exploded from a narrow subspecialty of jurisprudence chiefly of interest to academic lawyers into a literature read in departments of education, cultural studies, English, sociology, comparative literature, political science, history, and anthropology around the country. That is where this book comes in. Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic have written a primer for nonlawyers that makes the now sprawling literature of critical race theory easily accessible to the beginner. From the earliest social and intellectual origins of the movement to its key themes and debates to its methods to its future, Delgado and Stefancic offer a lively, lucid guide to critical race theory and a starting place for further reading and thinking. With the help of this book, even students who find their official course reading lists as barren as I did in 1983 will find their way into a rich and important intellectual debate. Critical race theory not only dares to treat race as central to the law and policy of the United States; it dares to look beyond the popular belief that getting rid of racism means simply getting rid of ignorance or encouraging everyone to “get along.” To read this primer is to be sobered by the recognition that racism is part of the structure of legal institutions but also to be invigorated by the creativity, power, wit, and humanity of the voices speaking about ways to change that structure. As race relations continue to shape our lives in the

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Foreword  x v ii

new century—­setting the stage for new tragedies and new hopes—­critical race theory has become an indispensable tool for making sense of it all. Meanwhile, I’ve saved my 1989 Critical Race Theory Workshop T-­shirt. I’m betting it will be worth something someday.

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PREFACE TO THE FOURTH EDITION

Since we published the first edition of this book in 2001, the United States has lived through several economic downturns, an outbreak of terrorism, the onset of an epidemic of hate directed against newcomers, especially undocumented Latinos and Middle Eastern people, and a worldwide pandemic. On a more hopeful note, the country elected its first Black president and vice president and enacted a comprehensive health-­reform measure providing access to health care for many of the formerly uninsured. Gay rights advanced impressively. The country’s demography has changed, as well. Latinos, at about 19 percent of the population, are now the largest minority group, having displaced African Americans, who make up about 13 percent. Asian Americans, although smaller numerically, have increased even more rapidly than the other two larger groups. In California, minorities of color together exceed the white population in size, if not yet in influence. Other states are not far behind. President Barack Obama’s two terms elicited a vigorous response in the formation of the Tea Party movement and later the election of Donald Trump, whose administration saw an upsurge in hate speech, opposition to immigration, and reversal of civil rights gains. Globalization, outsourcing, and xix

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x x  Preface to the Fourth Edition

maquiladoras continued to remove tens of thousands of jobs, such that the gap in income and family wealth between the richest few and the rest of society reached one of the highest levels ever. Police profiling and shootings, the war on drugs, and harsh sentencing policies heightened minority miseries and swelled the prison population. As we went to press in mid-­2022, many of these problems remain. Critical race theory has taken note of all these developments. As the reader will see, a new generation of critical race scholars has examined these issues and responded to critics. Employing the same reader-­friendly language, absence of buzzwords and jargon, numerous examples, and excerpts from leading court opinions, the fourth edition brings Critical Race Theory: An Introduction up to date. The reader will learn about new areas of scholarship, including studies of policing, sentencing, and incarceration; campus climate; workplace pressures; implicit bias; affirmative action; and race and class. Critical race theory continues to spread to other countries and areas of study, such as sociology, education, philosophy, and religion; and constituencies, such as campus activists. We include new questions for discussion, some of them aimed at posing practical steps that readers can take to advance a progressive race agenda. N OT E O N BIBL I O G R A PHI C S T Y L E

We used a modified form of legal (Bluebook) citation style for the items that appear in the Suggested Readings at the end of each chapter. Authors of articles and books appear

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Preface to the Fourth Edition  x x i

first in the citation, followed by the title. For an article in a journal, the volume number appears next, followed by the name of the journal and the first page of the article, ending with the year of publication. Internet cites appear in the familiar form. Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic Tuscaloosa, Alabama, 2022

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We wish to thank the many gallant individuals, historical and contemporary, sung and unsung, who have struggled to make the world a better place, including our own students. We owe special gratitude to the many writers in the critical race theory, feminist, and critical legal studies communities who have inspired us to think more deeply about social justice than we would have without their teachings. Thanks, as well, to Niko Pfund, past editor in chief at New York University Press, for encouraging us to write this book; to Deborah Gershenowitz, who encouraged us to create a second edition; and to Clara Platter, who prompted us to prepare the third and fourth. Anna Frederiksen-­Cherry, Peter Lee, Dorothea Reiff, Eugenia Jackson, Jami Vigil, Miriam Garza, and Jessica Lescau supplied editorial and research assistance. The University of Alabama School of Law, Seattle University School of Law, and the University of Colorado Law School provided us with first-­rate facilities and intellectually stimulating work environments. Texas A&M University—­L aw School and Institute for Advanced Study—­provided research support and release time to complete the third edition.

x x iii

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I

INTRODUCTION

Think of events that can occur in an ordinary day. A child raises her hand repeatedly in a fourth-­grade class; the teacher either recognizes her or does not. A shopper hands a cashier a five-­ dollar bill to pay for a small item; the clerk either smiles, makes small talk, and deposits change in the shopper’s hand or places it flat on the counter for the shopper to pick up, one coin at a time. A woman goes to a new-­car lot ready to buy; salespeople stand about talking to each other or all converge trying to help her. A jogger in a park gives a brief acknowledgment to an approaching walker; the walker returns the greeting or walks by silently. You are a white person—­the child, the shopper, the jogger. The responses are all from white people and are all dismissive. Are you annoyed? Do you, for even a moment, think that maybe you are receiving this treatment because of your race? Or might you think that all these people are merely having a bad day? Next suppose that the responses are from people of color. Are you thrown off guard? Angry? Depressed? You are a person of color and these same things happen to you, and the actors are all white. What is the first thing that comes to your mind? Do you immediately think that you might be treated in these ways because you are not white? If so, how do you feel? Angry? Downcast? Do you let it roll off your back? And if the responses come from fellow people of color, then 1

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2  Introduction

what do you think? Suppose the person of color is from a group other than your own? Sometimes actions like these stem from mere rudeness or indifference. The merchant is in a hurry; the walker, lost in thought. But at other times, race seems to play a part. When it does, social scientists call the event a “microaggression,” by which they mean one of those many sudden, stunning, or dispiriting transactions that mar the days of women and folks of color. Like water dripping on sandstone, they can be thought of as small acts of racism, consciously or unconsciously perpetrated, welling up from the assumptions about racial matters most of us absorb from the cultural heritage in which we come of age in the United States. These assumptions, in turn, continue to inform our public civic institutions—­government, schools, churches—­ and our private, personal, and corporate lives. Sometimes the acts are not micro at all. Imagine that the woman or minority standing alone and ignored at the car lot eventually attracts the attention of a salesperson. They negotiate, and she buys a car. Later she learns that she paid almost a thousand dollars more than what the average white male pays for that same car. (See Ian Ayres, Fair Driving, 104 Harv. L. Rev. 817 [1991]; Ellen Brait, Resumé Whitening Doubles Job Callbacks for Minorities, Study Finds, Guardian, March 3, 2016, www.theguardian.com.) A fourth-­grade teacher, shortly before beginning a unit on world cultures, passes out a form asking the children to fill out where their parents “are from.” The bright child who raised her hand earlier hesitates, knowing that her parents are undocumented entrants who fear being discovered and deported.

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Introduction 3

A . W H AT I S CR I T I CA L R ACE T HEO RY ?

The critical race theory (CRT) movement is a collection of activists and scholars engaged in studying and transforming the relationship among race, racism, and power. The movement considers many of the same issues that conventional civil rights and ethnic studies discourses take up but places them in a broader perspective that includes economics, history, setting, group and self-­interest, and emotions and the unconscious. Unlike traditional civil rights discourse, which stresses incrementalism and step-­by-­step progress, critical race theory examines the very foundations of the liberal order, including equality theory, legal reasoning, Enlightenment rationalism, and neutral principles of constitutional law. After the first decade, critical race theory began to splinter and now includes a well-­developed body of Asian American jurisprudence, a forceful Latino-­critical (LatCrit) contingent, a feisty LGBT interest group, and now a Muslim caucus. Although the groups continue to maintain good relations under the umbrella of critical race theory, each has developed its own body of literature and set of priorities. For example, Latino and Asian scholars study immigration policy, as well as language rights and discrimination based on accent or national origin. A group of American Indian scholars addresses indigenous people’s rights, sovereignty, and land claims. They also study historical trauma and its legacy and health consequences, as well as Indian mascots and co-­optation of Indian culture. Scholars of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African background address discrimination against their groups, especially

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4  Introduction

in the aftermath of 9/11 and Donald J. Trump’s presidency. (See, e.g., Khaled A. Beydoun, Between Indigence, Islamophobia and Erasure: Poor and Muslim in “War on Terror” America, 105 Calif. L. Rev. 1463 [2016]. On the diffusion of critical race theory to other disciplines and nations, see chapter 6.) B . E A R LY O R I G IN S

Critical race theory sprang up in the 1970s, as a number of lawyers, activists, and legal scholars across the country realized, more or less simultaneously, that the heady advances of the civil rights era of the 1960s had stalled and, in many respects, were being rolled back. Realizing that new theories and strategies were needed to combat the subtler forms of racism that were gaining ground, early writers, such as Derrick Bell, Alan Freeman, and Richard Delgado, put their minds to the task. They were soon joined by others, and the group held its first workshop at a convent outside Madison, Wisconsin, in the summer of 1989. Further conferences and meetings took place. Some were closed sessions at which the group threshed out internal problems and struggled to clarify central issues, while others were public, multiday affairs with panels, plenary sessions, keynote speakers, and a broad representation of scholars, students, and activists from a wide variety of disciplines. C. R EL AT I O N SHIP TO PR E V I O U S M OV EMEN T S

As the reader will see, critical race theory builds on the insights of two previous movements, critical legal studies and

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Introduction 5

radical feminism, to both of which it owes a large debt. It also draws from certain European philosophers and theorists, such as Antonio Gramsci, Michel Foucault, and Jacques Derrida, as well as from the American radical tradition exemplified by such figures as Sojourner Truth, Frederick Douglass, W. E. B. Du Bois, César Chávez, Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Black Power and Chicano movements of the 1960s and early 1970s. From critical legal studies, the group borrowed the idea of legal indeterminacy—­the idea that not every legal case has one correct outcome. Instead, one can decide most cases either way, by emphasizing one line of authority over another or interpreting one fact differently from the way one’s adversary does. The group also incorporated skepticism of triumphalist history and the insight that favorable precedent, like Brown v. Board of Education, tends to erode over time, cut back by narrow lower-­court interpretation, administrative foot dragging, and delay. The group also built on feminism’s insights into the relationship between power and the construction of social roles, as well as the unseen, largely invisible collection of patterns and habits that make up patriarchy and other types of domination. From conventional civil rights thought, the movement took a concern for redressing historical wrongs, as well as the insistence that legal and social theory lead to practical consequences. CRT also shared with it a sympathetic understanding of notions of community and group empowerment. From ethnic studies, it took notions such as cultural nationalism, group cohesion, and the need to develop ideas and texts centered around each group and its foundational events and histories.

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6  Introduction

D. PR IN CIPA L F I G U R E S

The late Derrick Bell, formerly at Harvard Law School but serving as visiting professor of law at New York University when he died in 2011, became the movement’s intellectual father figure. Most famous for his interest-­convergence thesis, Bell authored many of CRT’s foundational texts. Alan Freeman, who taught at the State University of New York at Buffalo Law School, wrote a number of leading articles, including one that documented how the U.S. Supreme Court’s race jurisprudence, even when seemingly liberal in thrust, nevertheless legitimized racism. Kimberlé Crenshaw, Richard Delgado, Angela Harris, Cheryl Harris, Charles Lawrence, Mari Matsuda, Gary Peller, and Patricia Williams were major early figures, as well. Leading Asian scholars include Robert Chang, Neil Gotanda, Jerry Kang, and Eric Yamamoto. The top American Indian critical scholar is Robert Williams; prolific Latinos of a critical persuasion include Laura Gomez, Ian Haney López, Kevin Johnson, Gerald Lopez, Margaret Montoya, Juan Perea, and Francisco Valdes. Influential Black scholars include Paul Butler, Devon Carbado, the late Lani Guinier, and Angela Onwuachi-­Willig. The reader will find their ideas discussed frequently throughout this primer. The movement counts a number of fellow travelers and writers who are white, notably andré cummings, Nancy Levit, Tom Ross, Jean Stefancic, and Stephanie Wildman. (See also the discussion of critical white studies in chapter 5.)

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Introduction 7

E . SPIN -­O F F M OV EMEN T S

Although CRT began as a movement in the law, it has rapidly spread beyond that discipline. Today, many scholars in the field of education consider themselves critical race theorists who use CRT’s ideas to understand issues of school discipline and hierarchy, tracking, affirmative action, high-­ stakes testing, controversies over curriculum and history, bilingual and multicultural education, and alternative and charter schools. (See, e.g., Foundations of Critical Race Theory in Education [Edward Taylor, David Gillborn & Gloria Ladson-­Billings eds., 2d ed. 2015]; Handbook of Critical Race Theory in Education [Marvin Lynn & Adrienne D. Dixson eds., 2d ed. 2022].) They discuss the rise of biological racism in educational theory and practice and urge attention to the resegregation of American schools. Some question the Anglocentric curriculum and charge that many educators apply a “deficit theory” approach to schooling for minority kids. As discussed later, critical race ideas in K-­12 schools have come under sharp attack. Political scientists ponder voting strategies coined by critical race theorists, while women’s studies professors teach about intersectionality—­the predicament of women of color and others who sit at the intersection of two or more categories. Ethnic studies courses often include a unit on critical race theory, and American Studies departments teach material on critical white studies developed by CRT writers. Sociologists, theologians, and health care specialists use critical

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8  Introduction

theory and its ideas. Philosophers incorporate critical race ideas in analyzing issues such as viewpoint discrimination and whether Western philosophy is inherently white in its orientation, values, and method of reasoning. Unlike some academic disciplines, critical race theory contains an activist dimension. It tries not only to understand our social situation but to change it, setting out not only to ascertain how society organizes itself along racial lines and hierarchies but to transform it for the better. On the spread of critical race theory to other countries, such as Australia, Brazil, India, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United Kingdom, see chapter 6. F. BA SI C T ENE T S O F CR I T I CA L R ACE T HEO RY

What do critical race theorists believe? Probably not every writer would subscribe to every tenet set out in this book, but many would agree on the following propositions. First, racism is ordinary, not aberrational—­“normal science,” the usual way society does business, the common, everyday experience of most people of color in this country. Second, most would agree that our system of white-­over-­color ascendancy serves important purposes, both psychic and material, for the dominant group. The first feature, ordinariness, means that racism is difficult to address or cure because it is not acknowledged. Color-­blind, or “formal,” conceptions of equality, expressed in rules that insist only on treatment that is the same across the board, can thus remedy only the most blatant forms of discrimination, such as mortgage redlining

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Introduction 9

or an immigration dragnet in a food-­processing plant that targets Latino workers or the refusal to hire a Black Ph.D. rather than a white college dropout, which stand out and attract our attention. The second feature, sometimes called “interest convergence” or material determinism, adds a further dimension. Because racism advances the interests of both white elites (materially) and working-­class whites (psychically), large segments of society have little incentive to eradicate it. Consider, for example, Derrick Bell’s shocking proposal (discussed in chapter 2) that Brown v. Board of Education—­ considered a great triumph of civil rights litigation—­may have resulted more from the self-­interest of elite whites than from a desire to help Blacks. A third theme of critical race theory, the “social construction” thesis, holds that race and races are products of social thought and relations. Not objective, inherent, or fixed, they correspond to no biological or genetic reality; rather, races are categories that society invents, manipulates, or retires when convenient. People with common geographic origins may share certain physical traits, of course, such as skin color, physique, and hair texture. But these constitute only an extremely small portion of their genetic endowment, are dwarfed by what we have in common, and have little or nothing to do with distinctly human, higher-­order traits, such as personality, intelligence, and moral behavior. That society frequently chooses to ignore these scientific truths, creates races, and endows them with pseudo-­permanent characteristics is of great interest to critical race theory.

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10  Introduction

Another, somewhat more recent, development concerns differential racialization and its consequences. Critical writers in law, as well as in social science, have drawn attention to the ways the dominant society racializes different minority groups at different times, in response to shifting needs such as the labor market. At one period, for example, society may have had little use for Black people but much need for Mexican or Japanese agricultural workers. At another time, the Japanese, including citizens of long standing, may have been in intense disfavor and removed to war relocation camps, while society cultivated other groups of color for jobs in war industry or as cannon fodder on the front. In one era, Muslims are somewhat exotic neighbors who go to mosques and pray several times of day—­harmless but odd. A few years later, they emerge as security threats. Popular images and stereotypes of various minority groups shift over time, as well. In one era, a group of color may be depicted as happy-­go-­lucky, simpleminded, and content to serve white folks. A little later, when conditions change, that very same group may appear in cartoons, movies, and other cultural scripts as menacing, brutish, and out of control, requiring close supervision and restraint. In one era, Middle Eastern people are exotic, fetishized figures wearing veils, wielding curved swords, and summoning genies from lamps. Later, after circumstances change, they emerge as fanatical, religiously crazed terrorists bent on destroying America and killing innocent citizens. Closely related to differential racialization—­the idea that each race has its own origins and ever-­evolving history—­is

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Introduction 11

the notion of intersectionality and antiessentialism. No person has a single, easily stated, unitary identity. A white feminist may also be Jewish or working class or a single mother. An African American activist may be male or female, gay or straight. A Latino may be a Democrat, a Republican, or even Black—­perhaps because that person’s family hails from the Caribbean. An Asian may be a Hmong of rural background and unfamiliar with city life or a fourth-­generation Chinese with a father who is a university professor and a mother who operates a business. Everyone has potentially conflicting, overlapping identities, loyalties, and allegiances. A final element concerns the notion of a unique voice of color. Coexisting in somewhat uneasy tension with antiessentialism, the voice-­of-­color thesis holds that because of their different histories and experiences with oppression, Black, Native American, Asian, and Latino writers and thinkers may be able to communicate to their white counterparts matters that the whites are unlikely to know. Minority status, in other words, brings with it a presumed competence to speak about race and racism. The legal storytelling movement urges Black and brown writers to recount their experiences with racism, daily life, and the legal system and to apply their own unique perspectives to assess law’s master narratives. This topic, too, is taken up later in this book. G . H OW M U CH R ACI SM I S T HER E IN T HE WO R L D ?

Many modern-­day readers believe that racism is declining or that class today is more important than race. And it is

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1 2  Introduction

certainly true that lynching and other shocking expressions of racism are less frequent than they were in the past. Moreover, many Euro-­Americans consider themselves to have Black, Latino, or Asian friends. Many enjoy watching Black or Latino entertainers and sports figures and listening to rap music. Still, by every social indicator, racism continues to blight the lives of people of color, including holders of high-­ echelon jobs, even judges. Police-­community encounters are daily reminders that this continues to happen. I concede that I am black. I do not apologize for that obvious fact. I take rational pride in my heritage, just as most other ethnics take pride in theirs. However, that one is black does not mean . . . that he is anti-­white. . . . As do most blacks, I believe that the corridors of history in this country have been lined with countless instances of racial injustice. . . . Thus a threshold question which might be inferred from defendants’ petition is: Since blacks (like most other thoughtful Americans) are aware of the “sordid chapter in American history” of racial injustice, shouldn’t black judges be disqualified per se from adjudicating cases involving claims of racial discrimination? Federal Judge Leon Higginbotham, in refusing to disqualify himself from hearing a case, Commonwealth v. Local Union 542, International Union of Operating Engineers, 388 F. Supp. 155, 163, 165 (E.D. Pa. 1974)

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Introduction 1 3

Studies show that blacks and Latinos who seek loans, apartments, or jobs are much more apt than similarly qualified whites to suffer rejection, often for vague or spurious reasons. Even highly placed Black or Latino lawyers or executives may attract suspicion while riding a commuter train or upon arriving at their offices earlier than usual. The prison population is largely Black and brown; chief executive officers, senators, surgeons, and university presidents are almost all white. In recent years, almost all Oscar-­winning actors have been white. Poverty, however, has a Black or brown face: Black families command, on the average, about one-­ thirteenth of the assets of their white counterparts. They pay more for many products and services, including cars. People of color lead shorter lives, receive worse medical care, complete fewer years of school, and occupy more menial jobs than do most whites. A recent United Nations report showed that African Americans in the United States would make up the twenty-­seventh-­ranked nation in the world on a combined index of social well-­being; Latinos would rank thirty-­ third. Studies using the Implicit Association Test (IAT) show that a high percentage of American citizens harbor negative attitudes toward members of groups other than their own. Why all this is so and the relationship between racism and economic oppression—­between race and class—­are topics of great interest to critical race theory and are covered later in this book.

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14  Introduction

H . O RG A N IZ AT I O N O F T HI S B O O K

Critical Race Theory: An Introduction addresses, in simple, straightforward language, the foregoing and additional ideas characteristic of critical race jurisprudence. Chapter 2 presents four large themes in that body of thought—­interest convergence or material determinism, revisionist interpretations of history, the critique of liberalism, and structural determinism. Chapter 3 takes up storytelling, counterstorytelling, and the narrative turn in general; chapter 4 addresses the twin themes of intersectionality and antiessentialism. It also considers cultural nationalism and its opposite—­the idea that minorities should attempt to assimilate and blend into mainstream society. It also touches on the question of whether immigrants weaken American solidarity and identity. Does American racial thought contain an implicit black-­ white binary, an unstated dichotomy in which society comes divided into two groups, whites and Blacks, so that non-­Black minority groups, such as Filipinos or Puerto Ricans, enter into the equation only insofar as they are able to depict themselves and their problems by analogy to Blacks? Chapter 5 explores this issue, as well as whiteness studies. Social scientists have long put minority groups under the lens, examining their culture, intelligence, motivation, family arrangements, music, sexual habits, and much more. Recently scholars on both sides of the color line have switched perspective and are examining whites as a group. One topic that critical white studies addresses is whether such a thing as white privilege

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Introduction 15

exists and, if so, what it consists of. Chapter 5 also looks at the scholarship of other racial groups such as LatCrits, critical Asian writers, feminists, and LGBT theorists. As the reader might imagine, critical race theory has come in for its share of criticism. Chapter 6 examines the main challenges that writers from both the Left and the Right have leveled at this approach to civil rights, including the one by Trump’s followers beginning in 2020. It also includes responses to those objections. Chapter 7 describes critical race theory’s current situation. It also ponders a few of the issues on the movement’s agenda, including hate speech, campus climate, criminal justice, racial profiling, merit, affirmative action, poverty, immigration, national security, and globalization. A concluding chapter hazards some predictions on the country’s racial future and CRT’s role in it. The reader will find in each chapter questions for discussion and a short list of suggested readings. We include hypotheticals and classroom exercises where we think these will promote understanding. We also excerpt passages from judicial decisions illustrating the influence of critical race theory. At the end, we include an extensive glossary of terms, including many that are not found in this book.

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16  Introduction

Questions and Comments for Chapter I 1. Is critical race theory pessimistic? Consider that it holds that racism is ordinary, normal, and embedded in society and, moreover, that changes in relationships among the races (which include both improvements and turns for the worse) reflect the interest of dominant groups, rather than idealism, altruism, or the rule of law. Or is it optimistic, because it believes that race is a social construction? (As such, it should be subject to ready change.) And if CRT does have a dark side, what follows from that? Is medicine pessimistic because it focuses on diseases and traumas? 2. Most people of color believe that the world contains much more racism than white folks do. What accounts for this difference? 3. Is race or class more important in determining one’s life chances? 4. Why have scholars in the field of education, particularly, found CRT’s teachings helpful? 5. Is racism essentially a cognitive error—­a product of ignorance or lack of experience—­a nd so correctable through teaching and learning? 6. If you are a community activist, what lessons from this chapter could you apply to your daily work? 7. Have you read any books, published before 1989 perhaps, that were works of critical race theory, even if they were not designated as such?

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Introduction 17

Sug ge st e d R e a di ng s Ayres, Ian, Pervasive Discrimination: Unconventional Evidence of Racial and Gender Discrimination (2003). Bell, Derrick A., Race, Racism, and American Law (6th ed. 2008). Bonilla-­Silva, Eduardo, Racism Without Racists: Color-­Blind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in America (6th ed. 2021). Carbado, Devon W. & Mitu Gulati, Acting White: Rethinking Race in “Post-­Racial” America (2013; repr., 2015). Cho, Sumi & Robert Westley, Critical Race Coalitions: Key Movements That Performed the Theory, 33 U.C. Davis L. Rev. 1377 (2000). Critical Race Studies in Education Association, www.crseassoc. org (official website). Critical Race Theory: The Cutting Edge (Richard Delgado & Jean Stefancic eds., 3d ed. 2013). Critical Race Theory: The Key Writings That Formed the Movement (Kimberlé Crenshaw, Neil Gotanda, Gary Peller & Kendall Thomas eds., 1995). Critical Race Theory in Education: All God’s Children Got a Song (Adrienne D. Dixson, Celia D. Rousseau & Jamel K. Donnor eds., 2d ed. 2016). Curry, Tommy, Will the Real CRT Please Stand Up? 2 The Crit: J. Crit. Legal Stud. 1 (2009). Delgado, Richard, Liberal McCarthyism and the Origins of Critical Race Theory, 94 Iowa L. Rev. 1505 (2009). Edelman, Benjamin G., Michael Luca & Daniel Svirsky, Racial Discrimination in the Sharing Economy (Harvard Business School Working Paper, Jan. 6, 2016).

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18  Introduction

Gelber, Katharine & Luke McNamara, The Effects of Civil Hate Speech Laws: Lessons from Australia, 49 Law & Society Rev. 631 (2015). Haney López, Ian F., The Social Construction of Race: Some Observations on Illusion, Fabrication, and Choice, 29 Harv. C.R.-­C.L. L. Rev. 1 (1994). Kendi, Ibram X., How to Be an Antiracist (2019). Moschel, Mathias, Law, Lawyers and Race: Critical Race Theory from the United States to Europe (2014). Omi, Michael & Howard Winant, Racial Formation in the United States (3d ed. 2014). Perea, Juan F., Buscando América: Why Integration and Equal Protection Fail to Protect Latinos, 117 Harv. L. Rev. 1420 (2004). Race and Races: Cases and Resources for a Diverse America (Juan Perea, Richard Delgado, Angela Harris, Jean Stefancic & Stephanie Wildman eds., 3d ed. 2018). Race Is . . . Race Isn’t: Critical Race Theory and Qualitative Studies in Education (Laurence Parker, Donna Deyhle & Sofia Villenas eds., 1999). Trubek, David, M., Foundational Events, Foundational Myths, and the Creation of Critical Race Theory, or How to Get Along with a Little Help from Your Friends, 43 Conn. L. Rev. 1503 (2011). Trump, Donald J., Executive Order on Combating Race and Sex Stereotyping, Sept. 22, 2020, https://trumpwhitehouse.archives. gov.

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II

HALLMARK CRITICAL RACE THEORY THEMES

Imagine that a pair of businessmen pass a beggar on a busy downtown street. One says something disparaging about “those bums always sticking their hands out—­I wish they would get a job.” His friend takes him to task for his display of classism. He explains that the street person may have overheard the remark and had his feelings hurt. He points out that we should all strive to purge ourselves of racism, classism, and sexism, that thoughts have consequences, and that how you speak makes a difference. The first businessman mutters something about political correctness and makes a mental note not to let his true feelings show in front of his friend again. Is the beggar any better off? Or imagine that a task force of highly advanced extraterrestrials lands on Earth and approaches the nearest human being they can find, who happens to be a street person relaxing on a park bench. They offer him any one of three magic potions. The first is a pill that will rid the world of sexism—­ demeaning, misogynist attitudes toward women. The second is a pill that will cure racism; the third, one that will cure classism—­negative attitudes toward people of lower socioeconomic station than oneself. Introduced into the planet’s water system, each pill will cure one of the three scourges effectively and permanently. The street person, of course, chooses clas19

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20  Hallmark Critical R ace Theory Themes

sism and throws pill number three into a nearby water department reservoir. Will the lives of poor people like him improve very much the next day? Perhaps not. Passersby may be somewhat kinder, may smile at them more often, but if something inherent in the nature of our capitalist system ineluctably produces poverty and class segregation, that system will continue to create and chew up victims, irrespective of our attitudes toward them. Individual street people may feel better, but they will still be street people. And the free-­enterprise system, which is built on the idea of winners and losers, will continue to produce new ones every day. What about racism? Suppose a magic pill like the one mentioned above were invented, or perhaps an enterprising entrepreneur developed The Ultimate Diversity Seminar, one so effective that it would completely eliminate unkind thoughts, stereotypes, and misimpressions harbored by its participants toward persons of other races. The president’s civil rights adviser prevails on all the nation’s teachers to introduce it into every K–­12 classroom, and on the major television networks and cable network news to show it on prime time. Would life improve very much for people of color? A . IN T ER E S T C O N V ERG EN CE , M AT ER I A L D E T ER MINI SM , A ND R ACI A L R E A L I SM

This hypothetical question poses an issue that squarely divides critical race theory thinkers—­indeed, civil rights activists in general. One camp, which we may call “idealists,” holds that racism and discrimination are matters of think-

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Hallmark Critical R ace Theory Themes  21

ing, mental categorization, attitude, and discourse. Race is a social construction, not a biological reality, they reason. Hence we may unmake it and deprive it of much of its sting by changing the system of images, words, attitudes, unconscious feelings, scripts, and social teachings by which we convey to one another that certain people are less intelligent, reliable, hardworking, virtuous, and American than others. A contrasting school—­the “realists” or economic determinists—­holds that though attitudes and words are important, racism is much more than a collection of unfavorable impressions of members of other groups. For realists, racism is a means by which society allocates privilege and status. Racial hierarchies determine who gets tangible benefits, including the best jobs, the best schools, and invitations to parties in people’s homes. Members of this school of thought point out that anti-­Black prejudice sprang up with slavery and capitalists’ need for labor. Before then, educated Europeans held a generally positive attitude toward Africans, recognizing that African civilizations were highly advanced with vast libraries and centers of learning. Indeed, North Africans pioneered mathematics, medicine, and astronomy long before Europeans had much knowledge of these disciplines. Materialists point out that conquering nations universally demonize their subjects to feel better about exploiting them, so that, for example, planters and ranchers in Texas and the Southwest circulated notions of Mexican inferiority at roughly the same period that they found it tempting to take over Mexican lands or, later, to import Mexican people for backbreaking labor. For materialists, understanding the ebb

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2 2  Hallmark Critical R ace Theory Themes

and flow of racial progress and retrenchment requires a careful look at conditions prevailing at different times in history. Circumstances change so that one group finds it possible to seize advantage or to exploit another. They do so and then form appropriate collective attitudes to rationalize what was done. Moreover, what is true for subordination of minorities is also true for its relief: civil rights gains for communities of color coincide with the dictates of white self-­interest. Little happens out of altruism alone. In the early years of critical race theory, the realists were in a large majority. For example, scholars questioned whether the much-­vaunted system of civil rights remedies ended up doing people of color much good. In a classic article in the Harvard Law Review, Derrick Bell argued that advances for Black people always seemed to coincide with changing economic conditions and the self-­interest of elite whites. Sympathy, mercy, and evolving standards of social decency and conscience amounted to little, if anything. Audaciously, Bell selected Brown v. Board of Education, the crown jewel of U.S. Supreme Court jurisprudence, and invited his readers to ask themselves why the American legal system suddenly, in 1954, opened up as it did. The NAACP Legal Defense Fund had been courageously and tenaciously litigating school desegregation cases for years, usually losing or, at best, winning narrow victories. In 1954, however, the Supreme Court unexpectedly gave them everything they wanted. Why just then? Bell hypothesized that world and domestic considerations—­not moral qualms over Black people’s plight—­precipitated the pathbreaking decision. By 1954 the country had ended the Ko-

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Hallmark Critical R ace Theory Themes  2 3

rean War; the Second World War was not long past. In both wars, African American soldiers had performed valiantly in the service of democracy. Many of them returned to the United States having experienced, for the first time in their lives, a setting in which cooperation and survival took precedence over racism. They were unlikely to return willingly to regimes of menial labor and social vilification. For the first time in years, the possibility of mass domestic unrest loomed. During that period, as well, the United States was locked in the Cold War, a titanic struggle with the forces of international communism for the loyalties of uncommitted emerging nations, most of which were Black, brown, or Asian. It would ill serve the U.S. interest if the world press continued to carry stories of lynchings, Klan violence, and racist sheriffs wielding clubs and fire hoses on peaceful Black demonstrators. It was time for the United States to soften its stance toward domestic minorities. The interests of whites and Blacks, for a brief moment, converged. Bell’s article evoked outrage and accusations of cynicism. Yet, years later, the legal historian Mary Dudziak carried out extensive archival research in the files of the U.S. Department of State and the U.S. Department of Justice. Analyzing foreign press reports, as well as letters from U.S. ambassadors abroad, she showed that Bell’s intuition was largely correct. When the Justice Department intervened on the side of the NAACP for the first time in a major school-­desegregation case, it was responding to a flood of secret cables and memos outlining the United States’ interest in improving its image in the eyes of the Third World.

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24  Hallmark Critical R ace Theory Themes

Since Bell first propounded interest convergence, critical race theorists have applied it to understand many of the twists and turns of minority legal history, including that of Latinos. (See, e.g., Richard Delgado, Rodrigo’s Roundelay: Hernandez v. Texas and the Interest-­Convergence Dilemma, 41 Harv. C.R.-­C.L. L. Rev. 23 [2006].) Others have sought to apply it to the current world situation as the United States struggles to strengthen the hand of moderate Islam vis-­à-­vis its more fundamentalist faction. American leadership in the 21st century.  .  .  . means a wise application of military power, and rallying the world behind causes that are right. . . . That’s why I will keep working to shut down the prison at Guantanamo. It is expensive, unnecessary, and only serves as a recruitment brochure for our enemies. . . . The world respects us not just for our arsenal; it respects us for our diversity, and our openness, and the way we respect every faith. . . . His Holiness, Pope Francis, told this body from the very spot that I’m standing on tonight that “to imitate the hatred and violence of tyrants and murderers is the best way to take their place.” When politicians insult Muslims, whether abroad or our fellow citizens, when a mosque is vandalized, or a kid is called names . . . that’s . . . just wrong. It diminishes us in the eyes of the world. It makes it harder to achieve our goals. It betrays who we are as a country. President Barack Obama, State of the Union address, 2016

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Hallmark Critical R ace Theory Themes  25

B . R E V I SI O N I S T HI S TO RY

Bell’s analysis of Brown illustrates a second signature CRT theme. Revisionist history reexamines America’s historical record, replacing comforting majoritarian interpretations of events with ones that square more accurately with minorities’ experiences. It also offers evidence, sometimes suppressed in that very record, to support those new interpretations. Revisionist historians often strive to unearth little-­known chapters of racial struggle, sometimes in ways that reinforce current reform efforts. (See, e.g., Lobato v. Taylor and Mabo v. Queensland, two land-­reform cases cited in chapter 5.) Revisionism is often materialist in thrust, holding that to understand the zigs and zags of Black, Latino, and Asian fortunes, one must look to matters like profit, labor supply, international relations, and the interest of elite whites. For the realists, attitudes follow, explain, and rationalize what is taking place in the material sector. The difference between the materialists and the idealists is no minor matter. It shapes strategy on decisions of how and where to invest one’s energies. If the materialists are right, one needs to change the physical circumstances of minorities’ lives before racism will subside. One will take seriously things like unions, immigration quotas, the prison-­industrial complex, pandemics, and the loss of manufacturing and service jobs to outsourcing. If one is an idealist, campus speech codes, tort remedies for racist speech, media stereotypes, diversity seminars, healing circles, Academy Awards, and increasing the representation of Black, brown, and Asian actors

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26  Hallmark Critical R ace Theory Themes

on television shows will be high on one’s list of priorities. A middle ground would see both forces, material and cultural, operating together so that race reformers working in either area contribute to a broad program of racial reform. Racial insults are in no way comparable to statements such as, “You are a God damned . . . liar,” which [a standard guide] gives as an example of a “mere insult.” Racial insults are different qualitatively because they conjure up the entire history of racial discrimination in this country. Taylor v. Metzger, 706 A. 2d 685, 695 (N.J. 1998), citing Richard Delgado, Words That Wound: A Tort Action for Racial Insults, Epithets, and Name-­Calling, 17 Harv. C.R.-­C.L. L. Rev. 133, 157 (1982)

C. CR I T I Q U E O F L IBER A L I S M

As mentioned earlier, critical race scholars are dissatisfied with liberalism as a framework for addressing America’s racial problems. Many liberals believe in color blindness and neutral principles of constitutional law. They believe in equality, especially equal treatment for all persons, regardless of their different histories or current situations. Some even managed to convince themselves that with the election of Barack Obama, we arrived at a postracial stage of social development.

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Hallmark Critical R ace Theory Themes  2 7

The white race deems itself to be the dominant race in this country. And so it is, in prestige, in achievements, in education, in wealth, and in power. . . . But in view of the constitution, in the eye of the law, there is in this country no superior, dominant, ruling class of citizens. There is no caste here. Our constitution is color-­blind, and neither knows nor tolerates classes among citizens. In respect of civil rights, all citizens are equal before the law. The humblest is the peer of the most powerful. Justice John Harlan, dissenting, in Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537, 545 (1896)

Color blindness can be admirable, as when a governmental decision maker refuses to give in to local prejudices. But it can be perverse, for example, when it stands in the way of taking account of difference in order to help people in need. An extreme version of color blindness, seen in certain Supreme Court opinions, holds that it is wrong for the law to take any note of race, even to remedy a historical wrong. Critical race theorists (or “crits,” as they are sometimes called) hold that color blindness of the latter form will allow us to redress only extremely egregious racial harms, ones that everyone would notice and condemn. But if racism is embedded in our thought processes and social structures as deeply as many crits believe, then the “ordinary business” of society—­t he routines, practices, and institutions that we rely on to do the world’s work—­will keep minorities in subordinate positions. Only aggressive, color-­conscious

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efforts to change the way things are will do much to ameliorate misery. As an example of one such strategy, one critical race scholar proposed that society “look to the bottom” in judging new laws. If they would not relieve the distress of the poorest group—­or, worse, if they compound it—­we should reject them. Although color blindness seems firmly entrenched in the judiciary, a few judges have deviated from it on occasion. We are mindful that the Supreme Court has rejected the “role model” argument for reverse discrimination.  .  .  . The argument for the black lieutenant is not of that character. We doubt that many inmates of boot camps aspire to become correctional officers, though doubtless some do.  .  .  . The black lieutenant is needed because the black inmates are believed unlikely to play the correctional game of brutal drill sergeant and brutalized recruit unless there are some blacks in authority in the camp. This is not just speculation, but is backed up by expert evidence that the plaintiffs did not rebut. The defendants’ experts . . . did not rely on generalities about racial balance or diversity; did not, for that matter, defend a goal of racial balance. They opined that the boot camp in Greene County would not succeed in its mission of pacification and reformation with as white a staff as it would have had if a black male had not been appointed to one of the lieutenant slots. For then a security staff less than 6 percent black (4 out of 71), with no male black supervisor, would be administering a program for a prison population almost 70 percent black. . . .

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We hold . . . that . . . the preference that the administration of the Greene County boot camp gave a black male applicant for a lieutenant’s job on the ground of his race was not unconstitutional. Judge Richard Posner, Wittmer v. Peters, 87 F.3d 916, 919–­20 (7th Cir. 1996)

Crits are suspicious of another liberal mainstay, namely, rights. Particularly some of the older, more radical CRT scholars with roots in racial realism and an economic view of history believe that moral and legal rights are apt to do the right holder much less good than we like to think. In our system, rights are almost always procedural (for example, to a fair process) rather than substantive (for example, to food, housing, or education). Think how that system applauds affording everyone equality of opportunity but resists programs that assure equality of results, such as affirmative action at an elite college or university or efforts to equalize public school funding among districts in a region. Moreover, rights are almost always cut back when they conflict with the interests of the powerful. For example, hate speech, which targets mainly minorities, gays, lesbians, and other outsiders, receives legal protection, while speech that offends the interests of empowered groups finds a ready exception in First Amendment law. Think, for example, of speech that insults a judge or other authority figure, that defames a wealthy and well-­regarded person, that divulges a government secret, or that deceptively advertises products,

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thus cheating a large class of middle-­income consumers. Think of speech that violates the copyright of a powerful publishing house or famous author. Moreover, rights are said to be alienating. They separate people from each other—­“stay away, I’ve got my rights”—­ rather than encouraging them to form close, respectful communities. And with civil rights, lower courts have found it easy to narrow or distinguish the broad, ringing landmark decision like Brown v. Board of Education. The group that supposedly benefits always greets cases like Brown with great celebration. But after the singing and dancing die down, the breakthrough is quietly cut back by narrow interpretation, administrative obstruction, or delay. In the end, the minority group is left little better than it was before, if not worse. Its friends, the liberals, believing the problem has been solved, go on to a different campaign, such as saving the whales, while its adversaries, the conservatives, furious that the Supreme Court has given way once again to undeserving minorities, step up their resistance. (See Gerald N. Rosenberg, The Hollow Hope: Can Courts Bring About Social Change? [2d ed. 2008].) Lest the reader think that the crits are too hard on well-­ meaning liberals, bear in mind that in recent years the movement has softened somewhat. When it sprang up in the 1970s, complacent, backsliding liberalism represented the principal impediment to racial progress. Today that obstacle has been replaced by rampant, in-­your-­face conservatism that co-­opts Martin Luther King, Jr.’s language; finds little use for welfare,

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affirmative action, or other programs vital to the poor and minorities; and wants to militarize the border and make everyone speak English when businesses are crying for workers with foreign-­language proficiency. Other conservatives seized on President Barack Obama’s election to declare that America is now a postracial society, so that it is time for Black people and other minorities to stop complaining and roll up their sleeves like anyone else. Welfare payments, they say, merely create dependency and idleness. Because most critical race theorists believe things are more complicated than that, many of them have stopped focusing on liberalism and its ills and have begun to address the conservative tide. And a determined group maintains that rights are not a snare and a delusion; rather, they can bring genuine gains, while the struggle to obtain them unifies the group in a sense of common venture. D. S T RU C T U R A L D E T ER MINI SM

Everyone has heard the story about Eskimo languages, some of which supposedly contain many words for different kinds of snow. Imagine the opposite predicament—­a society that has only one word (say, “racism”) for a phenomenon that is much more complex than that, for example, biological racism; intentional racism; unconscious racism; microaggressions; nativism; intersectional racism; institutional racism; racism tinged with homophobia or sexism; racism that takes the form of indifference, coldness, or implicit associations;

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and white privilege, reserving favors, smiles, kindness, the best stories, one’s most charming side, and invitations to real intimacy for one’s own kind or class. Or imagine a painter raised by parents and preschool teachers who teach him that the world contains only three colors, red, blue, and yellow; or a would-­be writer who is raised with an artificially low vocabulary of three hundred words. Children raised in smoggy Mexico City are said to paint pictures with a brownish-­yellow, never blue, sky. These examples point out the concept that lies at the heart of structural determinism, the idea that our system, by reason of its structure and vocabulary, is ill equipped to redress certain types of wrong. Structural determinism, a powerful notion that engages both the idealistic and the materialistic strands of critical race theory, takes a number of forms. Consider the following four. (A fifth, the black-­white binary paradigm of race, comes in for discussion in chapter 5.)

1. Tools of Thought and the Dilemma of Law Reform Traditional legal research tools, found in standard law libraries, rely on a series of headnotes, index numbers, and other categories that lawyers use to find precedent. (With computerization, this reliance is somewhat less acute than it was formerly, but the problem still persists.) Suppose that no case is on point because the lawyer faces a problem of first impression—­the first of its kind—­requiring legal innovation. In such situations, commercial research tools will lead the lawyer to dead ends—­to solutions that have not worked.

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What the situation calls for is innovation, not the application of some preexisting rule or category. Even when a new idea, such as jury nullification, was beginning to catch on, the legal indexers who compiled the reference books and indexing tools may have failed to realize its significance. When Sir William Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England laid down the basic structure of liberal/capitalist thought, this served as a template for future generations of lawyers, so that legal change thereafter came slowly. Once the structure of law and legal categories takes form, it replicates itself much as, in the world of biology, DNA enables organisms to replicate. In some respects, the predicament is the old one about the chicken and the egg. It is hard to think about something that has no name, and it is difficult to name something unless one’s interpretive community has begun talking and thinking about it. As a thought exercise, the reader is invited to consider how many of the following terms and ideas, mentioned in this book and highly relevant to the work of progressive lawyers and activists, are apt to be found in standard legal reference works: intersectionality, interest convergence, microaggressions, antiessentialism, hegemony, hate speech, language rights, black-­white binary, jury nullification. How long will it take before these concepts enter the official vocabulary of law? A new school of thought, critical legal research, addresses many of these questions. It teaches first-­year law students to consider what is not in the indices as well as what is in them. It teaches to look for alternative sources in emerg-

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ing bodies of knowledge. (See, e.g., Symposium, Critical Legal Research, 101 B.U. L. Rev. 48 [online, 2021].) It teaches suspicion of the very algorithms build into commercial researching tools and how accepted terms like “illegal alien” channel thought.

2. The Empathic Fallacy Consider how in certain controversies, for example, the one over hate speech, a particular type of tough-­minded participant is apt to urge a free-­market response: if a minority finds himself or herself on the receiving end of a stinging remark, the solution, it is said, is not to punish the speaker or to enact some kind of campus hate-­speech rule but to urge the victim to speak back to the offender. “The cure for bad speech is more speech.” One difficulty with this approach is that it may be physically dangerous to talk back. Much hate speech is uttered in several-­on-­one situations, where talking back would be foolhardy. At other times, it is delivered in anonymous or cowardly fashion, such as graffiti scrawled on the bulletin board of a minority-­student group or an unsigned note in the mailbox of a student of color. In these instances, more speech is, of course, impossible. But a more basic problem is that much hate speech is simply not perceived as such at the time. The history of racial depiction shows that our society has blithely consumed a shocking parade of Sambos, coons, sneaky Japanese, exotic

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Orientals, and indolent, napping Mexicans—­images that society perceived at the time as amusing, cute, or, worse yet, true. How can one talk back to messages, scripts, and stereotypes that are embedded in the minds of one’s fellow citizens and, indeed, the national psyche? Trying to do so makes one come across as humorless or touchy. The idea that one can use words to undo the meanings that others attach to these very same words is to commit the empathic fallacy—­ the belief that one can change a narrative by merely offering another, better one—­that the reader’s or listener’s empathy will quickly and reliably take over. (See Richard Delgado & Jean Stefancic, Images of the Outsider in American Law and Culture: Can Free Expression Remedy Systemic Social Ills?, 77 Cornell L. Rev. 1258 [1992].) Unfortunately, however, empathy is in shorter supply than we like to think. Most people in their daily lives do not come into contact with many persons of radically different race or social station. We converse with, and read materials written by, persons in our own cultures. In some sense, we are all our stock of narratives—­t he terms, preconceptions, scripts, and understandings that we use to make sense of the world. They constitute who we are, the basis on which we judge new narratives—­such as one about an African American who is a genius or a hardworking Chicano who holds three jobs. The idea that a better, fairer script can readily substitute for the older, prejudiced one is attractive but is falsified by history. Change comes slowly. Try explaining to someone who has never seen a Mexican,

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except for cartoon figures wearing sombreros and serapes, that most Mexicans wear business suits. One of the reasons for avoiding excessive sentences is that the empathy required of . . . citizens in a democracy . . . is stunted when parents are away in prison. “[W]ithout regular comforting, physical contact and sensory stimulation from birth, the biological capacity for sociality—­the precondition for empathy and conscience—­cannot develop. . . . Empathy requires the nurturing required by early social relationships.” Breaking up families by sending fathers and mothers to prison for unnecessarily long terms sows the seeds of problems for the next generation, particularly when, as is sometimes the case, the ex-­prisoner becomes a “monster.” Jack B. Weinstein, Senior Judge, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of New York, Adjudicative Justice in a Diverse Mass Society, 8 J. L. & Pol’y 385, 410 (2000)

CL A S SRO O M E X ERCI SE

Pair off with one other member of your class or study group. Each of you then write down five propositions having to do with politics or social reality that you believe to be true, such as that women should have the right to choose whether to have an abortion, that everyone should be judged by the same standards for admission to school, or that the best government is one that governs least. You then

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offer a counterexample to one of the other person’s propositions, for example, a case of governmental intervention that worked. How did the other person react? Did he or she accept your argument and modify his or her position? What was the force of your “narrative,” and why did it succeed or fail? Then, reverse places and consider your partner’s case against one of your beliefs.

3. Serving Two Masters Derrick Bell has pointed out a third structure that impedes reform, this time in law. To litigate a law-­reform case, the lawyer needs a flesh-­and-­blood client. One might wish, for example, to establish the right of poor consumers to rescind a sales contract or to challenge the fiction that a school district is desegregated if the authorities have arranged that the makeup of certain schools is half Black and half Chicano (as some of them did in the wake of Brown v. Board of Education). Suppose, however, that the client and his or her community do not want the very same remedy that the lawyer does. The lawyer, who may represent a civil rights or public interest organization, may want a sweeping decree that names a new evil and declares it contrary to constitutional principles. He or she may be willing to gamble and risk all. The client, however, may want something different—­better schools or more money for the ones in his or her neighborhood. He or she may want bilingual education or more Black teach-

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ers, instead of classes taught by prize-­winning white teachers with Ph.D.s. A lawyer representing a poor client may want to litigate the right to a welfare hearing, while the client may be more interested in a new pair of Sunday shoes for his or her child. These conflicts, which are ubiquitous in law-­ reform situations, haunt the lawyer pursuing social change and seem inherent in our system of legal remedies. Which master should the lawyer serve? Do similar conflicts arise in the political realm? For example, does a Black president or senator, by the very nature of his or her role, have to downplay his or her blackness in fulfilling obligations to the country as a whole? CL A S SRO O M E X ERCI SE : W H O SH O U L D CA L L T HE SH OT S ?

Professor Hamar Aziz III, Ph.D. is a physicist of Egyptian descent who teaches at a major research university. Aziz recently attempted to fly to an international conference in Geneva but was turned aside at the local airport by TSA officials who told him that his name was on a no-­fly list. Aziz, who missed an opportunity to present his latest paper, is furious and wants you to help redress the harm he has suffered and make sure that it does not happen again to him. In short, he wants the government to take his name off the list so that he can fly once again. Your research shows that the no-­fly list is full of errors and results in the grounding of many innocent passengers,

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some of whom, like Aziz, merely happen to have the same name as someone who has attracted the attention of the authorities. Aziz is the perfect candidate to challenge the list, since he has a sparkling record, is a former Marine officer and Boy Scout troop leader, and was an alternate to the U.S. Olympic team in the long jump. Aziz, however, is mainly interested in getting himself off the list. You would rather sue to get rid of the list entirely, or at least get the government to go back to the drawing boards. Should you take Aziz’s case?

4. Race Remedies Law as a Homeostatic Device Some crits, such as Derrick Bell and Alan Freeman, even argue that our system of civil rights law and enforcement ensures that racial progress occurs at just the right slow pace. Too slow would make minorities impatient and risk destabilization; too fast could jeopardize important material and psychic benefits for elite groups. When the gap between our ideals and practices becomes too great, the system produces a “contradiction-­closing case,” so that everyone will think that it is truly fair and just. And on those rare occasions when social conditions call for a genuine concession, such as affirmative action, the costs of that concession are always placed on minorities—­in the form of stigma—­or on working-­class whites (like Allan Bakke, who sought admission to the University of California at Davis Medical School), who are least able to incur them.

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In her amended complaint, Monteiro alleged that her ninth-­grade daughter and other similarly situated African-­ American students attended a school where they were called “niggers” by white children, and where that term was written on the walls of the buildings in which they were supposed to learn civics and social studies. It does not take an educational psychologist to conclude that being referred to by one’s peers by the most noxious racial epithet in the contemporary American lexicon, being shamed and humiliated on the basis of one’s race, and having the school authorities ignore or reject one’s complaints would adversely affect a Black child’s ability to obtain the same benefit from schooling as her white counterparts.  .  .  . It is the beginning of high school, when a young adolescent is highly impressionable and is making decisions about education that will affect the course of her life.  .  .  . [A] school where this sort of conduct occurs unchecked is utterly failing in its mandate to provide a nondiscriminatory educational environment. Accordingly, we find that the complaint sets forth allegations that satisfy the first factor of the test for a Title VI violation. Monteiro v. Tempe Union High School District, 158 F.3d 1022, 1039 (9th Cir. 1998) (Before Monteiro, a nearly unbroken string of decisions rejected relief for minority plaintiffs subjected to racist slurs and struck down campus speech codes.)

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Questions and Comments for Chapter II 1. If society agreed to think only kind thoughts about people of color, would their condition improve very much? How much, and in the short or the long run? 2. If society agreed to treat everyone, including people of color, exactly the same, would the condition of communities of color improve very much? Again, in the short or the long run? 3. If American Indians discovered gold on the reservation or Blacks did the same in the inner city, so that the average wealth and family income of Indians and Blacks were exactly the same as those of whites, would racism abate? Become more intense? Stay the same? 4. Today more African Americans attend segregated schools than they did when Brown v. Board of Education was decided. What does this say about reform through law? 5. Beginning with Brown and continuing through the sixties and early seventies, the Supreme Court handed down a number of decisions favorable to Black people and other minorities. Now it has been limiting affirmative action, weakening enforcement under antidiscrimination laws, and reducing the scope of Indian sovereignty. What explains the shift? 6. Is society, over time, becoming more, or less, fair in its treatment of minorities? If your answer is “more fair,” why are courts and legislatures making it harder to vote? If your answer is “less fair,” how do you account for Obama’s presidency? For Kamala Harris’s vice presidency? 7. When is a favorable judicial decision a contradiction-­closing case?

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8. Suppose you are litigating an employment-­discrimination case on behalf of a Black woman who suffered ill treatment at work on account of her Black womanhood. The employer points out that he does not discriminate against Black men (and rather likes them) or against white women, with whom he also gets along well. Your suit, in short, requires that the law recognize a new cause of action for intersectional categories, such as Black women, who are members of two groups at the same time. Do you suspect that legal research in a commercial database would unearth the few decisions that have adjudicated such claims? Suppose the category, as yet, lacks an agreed-­upon name, such as “intersectional discrimination”? 9. You are a social activist who has recently come to believe that Derrick Bell’s interest-­ convergence hypothesis—­ that whites allow breakthroughs for Blacks only when it serves whites’ interests—­makes sense. Will this change your approach to activism, and, if so, how? 10. Is interest convergence pessimistic—­a counsel of despair?

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Sug ge st e d R e a di ng s Bell, Derrick A., Jr., Brown v. Board of Education and the Interest-­ Convergence Dilemma, 93 Harv. L. Rev. 518 (1980). Bell, Derrick A., Jr., Serving Two Masters: Integration Ideals and Client Interests in School Desegregation Litigation, 85 Yale L.J. 470 (1976). Bender, Steven, Mea Culpa: Lessons on Law and Regret from U.S. History (2015). Coates, Ta-­Nehisi, Between the World and Me (2015). Crenshaw, Kimberlé W., Race, Reform, and Retrenchment: Transformation and Legitimation in Antidiscrimination Law, 101 Harv. L. Rev. 1331 (1988). Delgado, Richard & Jean Stefancic, Why Do We Tell the Same Stories? Law Reform, Critical Librarianship, and the Triple Helix Dilemma, 42 Stan. L. Rev. 207 (1989). Dudziak, Mary L., Cold War Civil Rights: Race and the Image of America Democracy (2000). Freeman, Alan D., Legitimizing Racial Discrimination Through Antidiscrimination Law: A Critical Review of Supreme Court Doctrine, 62 Minn. L. Rev. 1049 (1978). Gotanda, Neil, A Critique of “Our Constitution Is Color-­Blind,” 44 Stan. L. Rev. 1 (1991). Guinier, Lani, Demosprudence Through Dissent, 122 Harv. L. Rev. 4 (2008). Haney Lopez, Ian F., Dog Whistle Politics: How Coded Racial Appeals Have Reinvented Racism and Wrecked the Middle Class (2015). Lawrence, Charles R., III, The Id, the Ego, and Equal Protection: Reckoning with Unconscious Racism, 39 Stan. L. Rev. 317 (1987).

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Peller, Gary, Critical Race Consciousness: Reconsidering America’s Ideologies of Racial Justice (2012). Williams, Robert A., Like a Loaded Weapon: The Rehnquist Court, Indian Rights, and the Legal History of Racism in America (2005). Zinn, Howard, A People’s History of the United States: 1492–­Present (20th Anniversary ed. 1999).

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III

LEGAL STORY TELLING AND NARRATIVE ANALYSIS

Have you ever had the experience of hearing one story and being completely convinced, then hearing an exactly opposite story, equally well told, and being left unsure of your convictions? In an everyday experience, Kim complains to the teacher that Billy has been picking fights on the playground. The teacher listens sympathetically and is ready to punish Billy. Fortunately, the teacher listens to Billy’s story or that of an impartial third observer. It turns out that Billy is not at fault at all; Kim started the trouble. Or have you perhaps had the experience of watching two gifted appellate lawyers arguing a case? You hear the first and are persuaded. You see no way that the court can fail to rule in his or her favor. Then the second lawyer argues the opposite side, citing different authority, invoking different principles, bringing out different aspects of the same cases that the first lawyer relied on. Your certainty is shaken; now you are unsure which side deserves to win. Or perhaps you have had the experience of discussing with a friend a famous case, such as the one resulting from the death of Ahmaud Arbery or one having to do with an accused terrorist who was tortured. You and she agree on most of the facts of what happened, but you put radically different interpretations 45

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on them. You are left wondering how two people can see “the same evidence” in such different lights. Critical race theorists have built on everyday experiences with perspective, viewpoint, and the power of stories and persuasion to come to a deeper understanding of how Americans see race. They have written parables, autobiography, and “counterstories” and have investigated the factual background and personalities, frequently ignored in the casebooks, of well-­known cases such as Korematsu (the Japanese-­internment case) or Plessy v. Ferguson (the separate-­but-­equal case). Other scholars have examined narrative theory in an effort to understand why certain stories work and others do not. Still others study the way trial lawyers consciously or unconsciously construct narratives—­ theories of a case—­that they hope will resonate with the jury and induce it to adopt their interpretations of what happened and to reject those of the opposite side. Legal storytellers, such as Derrick Bell and Patricia Williams, draw on a long history with roots going back to the slave narratives, tales written by Black captives to describe their condition and unmask the gentility that white plantation society pretended to. American Indians, of course, were great storytellers who used history and myth to preserve culture, to bind the group together, and to remind it of its common destiny. In Latino society, picaresque novelists made sly fun of social convention, puffed-­up nobility, and illegitimate authority. Although some writers criticize CRT for excessive negativity and failure to develop a positive program, legal

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storytelling and narrative analysis are clear-­cut advances that the movement can claim. Even some minority judges are finding it useful from time to time to insist on the validity of the perspective of color. By that standard, white judges will be permitted to keep the latitude they have enjoyed for centuries in discussing matters of intellectual substance, even issues of human rights and, because they are white, still be permitted to later decide specific factual situations involving the principles of human rights which they have discussed previously in a generalized fashion. But for black judges, defendants insist on a far more rigid standard, which would preclude black judges from ever discussing race relations even in . . . generalized fashion. . . . To suggest that black judges should be so disqualified would be analogous to suggesting that the slave masters were right when . . . they argued that only they, but not the slaves, could evaluate the harshness or justness of the system. Federal Judge Leon Higginbotham, in refusing to disqualify himself from hearing a case, Commonwealth v. Local Union 542, International Union of Operating Engineers, 388 F. Supp. 155, 165 (E.D. Pa. 1974)

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A . O PENIN G A W IND OW O N TO I G N O R ED O R A LT ER N AT I V E R E A L I T IE S

One premise of legal storytellers is that members of this country’s dominant racial group cannot easily grasp what it is like to be nonwhite. Few have what W. E. B. Du Bois described as “double consciousness.” History books, Sunday sermons, and even case law contribute to a cultural hegemony that makes it difficult for reformers to make race an issue. How to bridge the gap in thinking between persons of good will whose experiences, perspectives, and backgrounds are radically different is a great challenge. Consider the following clash of stories. According to one leading CRT writer, the majority’s story of race would probably go something like this: Early in our history there was slavery, which was, of course, a terrible thing. Black people were brought to this country from Africa in chains and made to work in the fields. Some were viciously mistreated, which was an unforgivable wrong; others were treated kindly. Slavery ended with the Civil War, although many Black people remained poor, uneducated, and outside the cultural mainstream. As the country’s racial sensitivity to Black people’s plight increased, federal statutes and case law gradually eliminated the vestiges of slavery. Today, Black people enjoy many civil rights and are protected from discrimination in such areas as housing, public education, employment, and voting. A Black president recently occupied the White House, and a Black woman went on to become vice president. Many enter-

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tainers and sports figures—­millionaires all—­are Black. The gap between Blacks and whites is steadily closing, although it may take some time for it to close completely. At the same time, it is important not to go too far in providing special benefits for Black people. Doing so induces dependency and welfare mentality. It can also cause a backlash among innocent whites who believe they have suffered reverse discrimination. Most Americans are fair-­minded individuals who harbor little racial prejudice. The few who do can be punished when they act on those beliefs. That’s the first story. Yet coexisting with that comforting tale are others of Black, Chinese, Japanese, Latino, Filipino, and American Indian subordination in the United States, a history “gory, brutal, filled with more murder, mutilation, rape, and brutality than most of us can imagine or easily comprehend” (Derrick Bell, And We Are Not Saved 217 [1987]). That other history continues into the present and includes persons still alive. It includes infant death rates among minorities nearly double those of whites, as well as arrest and incarceration rates that are among the highest in the world. School dropout levels among Blacks and Latinos are worse than those in practically any industrialized country, and the gap between whites and nonwhites in income, assets, educational attainment, and life expectancy is as wide as it was thirty years ago, if not wider. Violence against Middle Eastern–­looking people, as well as against sexual minorities, has increased alarmingly. The new accounts dare to call our most prized legal doctrines and protections shams—­hollow pronouncements issued

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with great solemnity and fanfare, only to be silently ignored, cut back, or withdrawn when the celebrations die down. How can there be such divergent stories? Why do they not reconcile? To the first question, critical race theory answers, “experience.” People of different races have radically different experiences as they go through life. (Derrick Bell would add a further reason: “interest convergence”—­people believe what benefits them.) To the second, it answers that empathy is in short supply. (See the discussion of the empathic fallacy in chapter 2.) Literary and narrative theory holds that we each occupy a normative universe or “nomos” (or perhaps many of them), from which we are not easily dislodged. Talented storytellers nevertheless struggle to reach broad audiences with their messages. “Everyone loves a story.” The hope is that well-­told stories describing the reality of Black and brown lives can help readers bridge the gap between their worlds and those of others. Engaging stories can help us understand what life is like for another person and invite us into a new and unfamiliar world. “Race may be America’s single most confounding problem, but the confounding problem of race is that few people seem to know what race is.” (Ian F. Haney López, The Social Construction of Race: Some Observations on Illusion, Fabrication, and Choice, 29 Harv. C.R.-­C.L. L. Rev. 1, 5–­6 [1994]). In part, what makes race a confounding problem and what causes many people to not know what race is, is the view that the problems of race are the problems of the racial minority. They are not. The problems of race belong to all of us, no

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matter where our ancestors come from, no matter what the color of our skin. Thus, concluding that race is not an issue in this case because juror 32 is not a member of a racial minority, misses the point. Race is an issue. State v. Buggs, 581 N.W. 2d 329, 344 (Minn. 1998)

B . C O U N T ER S TO RY T EL L IN G

Some of the critical storytellers believe that stories also have a valid destructive function. Society constructs the social world through a series of tacit agreements mediated by images, pictures, tales, tweets, blog postings, social media, and other scripts. Much of what we believe is ridiculous, self-­serving, or cruel but is not perceived to be so until someone points it out. Attacking embedded preconceptions that marginalize others or conceal their humanity is a legitimate function of all fiction. In legal discourse, preconceptions and myths, for example, about Black criminality or Muslim terrorism, shape mindset—­the bundle of received wisdoms, stock stories, and suppositions that allocate suspicion, place the burden of proof on one party or the other, and tell us in cases of divided evidence what probably happened. These cultural influences are probably at least as determinative of outcomes as are the formal laws, since they supply the background against which the latter are interpreted and applied. Critical writers use counterstories to challenge, displace, or mock these pernicious narratives and beliefs. (See, e.g., Richard Delgado,

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Rodrigo’s Eighth Chronicle: Black Crime, White Fears—­On the Social Construction of Threat, 80 Va. L. Rev. 503 [1994], pointing out that white-­collar and corporate/industrial crime—­perpetrated mostly by whites—­causes more personal injury, death, and property loss than does all street crime combined, even on a per capita basis, and positing that this may be so because many whites suffer deprived childhoods.) C. CU R E FO R SIL EN CIN G

Stories also serve a powerful additional function for minority communities. Many victims of racial discrimination suffer in silence or blame themselves for their predicament. Others pretend that it didn’t happen or that they “just let it roll off my back.” All three groups are more silent than they need be. Stories can give them a voice and reveal that other people have similar experiences. Stories can name a type of discrimination (e.g., microaggression, unconscious discrimination, or structural racism); once named, it can be combated. If race is not real or objective but constructed, racism and prejudice should be capable of deconstruction; the pernicious beliefs and categories are, after all, our own. Powerfully written stories and narratives may begin a process of correction in our system of beliefs and categories by calling attention to neglected evidence and reminding readers of our common humanity. Even the conservative judge Richard Posner has conceded that major reforms in law often come through a conversion process or paradigm shift similar to the one Thomas Kuhn describes and minority storytellers advocate

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Legal Storytelling and Narrative Analysis  5 3

(Richard Posner, The Problems of Jurisprudence 459 [1990]). Barack Obama’s Dreams from My Father (1995) seems to have served a vital function in explaining to many readers the young president’s racial journey. The philosopher Jean-­François Lyotard’s concept of the differend helps explain the value of narratives for marginalized persons. The differend occurs when a concept such as justice acquires conflicting meanings for two groups. A prime example would be a case in which a judge seeks to hold responsible an individual who does not subscribe to the foundational views of the regime that is sitting in judgment of him or her. In situations like this, the subordinate person lacks language to express how he or she has been injured or wronged. (See, e.g., George Martinez, Philosophical Considerations and the Use of Narrative in the Law, 30 Rutgers L.J. 683 [1999].) For example, when contemporary Euro-­Americans resist even discussing reparations for Black people on the grounds that a Black person living today has never been a slave and so lacks standing, nor has any white person alive today been a slaveholder, the Black person who wishes to discuss these questions and is shunted aside suffers the differend. The prevailing conception of justice deprives her or him of the chance to express a grievance in terms the system will understand. Until very recently, women who suffered childhood incest or battered-­wife syndrome were victims of the differend, as were Latino undocumented persons who suffered workplace discrimination but could not complain for fear of being deported. Narratives provide a language to bridge the gaps in imagination and conception

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5 4  Legal Storytelling and Narrative Analysis

that give rise to the differend. They reduce alienation for members of excluded groups while offering opportunities for members of the majority group to meet them halfway. In our time, Middle Eastern writers describe the alienation and pain of dealing with daily suspicion that they are terrorists when, in fact, they may be law-­abiding accountants, teachers, office workers, or doctors. (See, e.g., John Tehranian, Whitewashed: America’s Invisible Middle Eastern Minority [2008].) D. S TO RY T EL L IN G IN C O U R T

Attorneys and teachers of clinical law have been applying storytelling and narrative analysis to understand how the dynamics of persuasion operate in the courtroom. They also use them to understand the interplay of power and interpretive authority between lawyer and client. Suppose, for example, the lawyer favors strategy A because it is 60 percent likely to win. The client, however, favors strategy B because it is “truer” to his experience or his world, even though it is less likely to produce a victory. Writers such as Lucy White and Anthony Alfieri show that attention to the narrative side of lawyering can enable lawyers representing the poor and disenfranchised to achieve a better brand of justice. This has prompted some critics to charge that CRT teaches unmitigated manipulation of emotions and playing the race card. For example, Jeffrey Rosen, legal affairs writer for the New Republic, charged that Johnnie Cochran’s successful defense of O. J. Simpson was an outrage and a case of “applied critical race theory.” Despite this and other criticisms, law has

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Legal Storytelling and Narrative Analysis  5 5

been slowly moving in the direction of recognizing the legitimacy and power of narrative. Children and certain other witnesses are permitted to testify in the form of an uninterrupted narrative, rather than through question-­and-­answer examination. With sexual-­offense victims, shield laws and evidentiary statutes protect them against certain types of examination, even though the Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause would otherwise permit the other side to attack their narrative forcefully, chop it into small pieces, and challenge each one. E . S TO RY T EL L IN G O N T HE D EF EN SI V E

Storytelling, as exemplified by the best-­s elling books of Derrick Bell, Patricia Williams, and others, has enjoyed a considerable vogue that has spread to other disciplines. It should not be a surprise, then, that the legal storytelling movement has come in for sharp criticism. Some of it comes from conservatives, like federal judge Richard Posner, who disagree—­at least at times—­substantively with what the crits are saying. But criticism also comes from leftist scholars, like Mark Tushnet, who consider that the genre is an ineffective and analytically unsound form of discourse, and from self-­ professed liberals, like Daniel Farber and Suzanna Sherry, whose critiques are discussed in chapter 6.

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5 6  Legal Storytelling and Narrative Analysis

Questions and Comments for Chapter III 1. Why are most legal storytellers Black or brown (Derrick Bell, Richard Delgado, Patricia Williams, Tara Yosso, Matthew Fletcher, Mari Matsuda, etc.)? 2. Do white people tell stories, too, but deem them not stories at all but the truth? 3. If one wanted to change another person’s mind about something, say, the death penalty, what would be more effective, an array of statistics or a good story or movie? 4. “Once upon a time . . .” Do stories (at least ones that are well told) cause the reader or listener to suspend disbelief, and, if so, is this a good or a bad thing? 5. Suppose you have a particular account of the world. For example, as a result of experience you have come to believe that virtue is almost always rewarded and that people generally get what they deserve. For you, government handouts and welfare just make matters worse. Someone tells you a story about a welfare recipient who used her allotment to raise her children, then went to school, earned a Ph.D., and became owner of a start-­up computer company. How do you react? Do you reconsider your views—­or merely pronounce the woman an exception? 6. What stories do you tend to hear in the debate over affirmative action? Which ones do you hear over and over again during presidential campaigns? (Self-­made man? Patriotic American? Tells it like it is? Defender of the Constitution?) Or during judicial confirmation hearings? (Will stick to the rule of law? Future judicial activist? Understands the common man?). 7. Is capitalism—­our society’s dominant mode of doing business—­a collection of stories, for example, that the market is the

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best way of allocating resources, that if everyone pursues his or her own self-­interest, society will benefit from the citizenry’s energy and inventions, and that state control is almost always bad? If it is so, will capitalism’s periodic crises and crashes eventually cause its supporters to modify their views? Or are stories of this kind impervious to experience? 8. If you hear a given story too often, does a discrepant item of evidence merely cause you to ignore it? 9. Suppose you have a friend who believes in a militarized border and strict enforcement of immigration laws. During a discussion, you learn that she believes that immigration brings Mexican criminals and terrorists into the country and increases the chances of the “next 9/11.” You have read studies showing that regions that have experienced increased immigration, including the undocumented kind, see decreasing (not increasing) crime rates. You have also read that to date not a single foreign terrorist is known to have sneaked across the border from Mexico. Are studies like these likely to persuade her to change her views on immigration, and, if not, why not? 10. How can a community activist employ storytelling in his or her work?

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Sug ge st e d R e a di ng s Alfieri, Anthony V., Resistance Songs: Mobilizing the Law and Politics of Community, 93 Texas L. Rev. 1459 (2015). Amsterdam, Anthony G. & Jerome Bruner, Minding the Law: How Courts Rely on Storytelling and How Their Stories Change the Ways We Understand the Law—­and Ourselves (2001). Bell, Derrick A., Jr., And We Are Not Saved: The Elusive Quest for Racial Justice (1987). Delgado, Richard, Storytelling for Oppositionists and Others: A Plea for Narrative, 87 Mich. L. Rev. 2411 (1989). Gonzalez, Carmen, et al., Presumed Incompetent II (2d ed. 2020). Law Stories Series (West Pub. Co.). Martinez, George A., Race, American Law, and the State of Nature, 112 W. Va. L. Rev. 799 (2010). Matsuda, Mari J., Looking to the Bottom: Critical Legal Studies and Reparations, 22 Harv. C.R.-­C.L. L. Rev. 323 (1987). Symposium: Legal Storytelling, 87 Mich. L. Rev. 2073 (1989). White, Lucie E., Subordination, Rhetorical Survival Skills, and Sunday Shoes: Notes on the Hearing of Mrs. G., 38 Buff. L. Rev. 1 (1990). Williams, Patricia J., The Alchemy of Race and Rights: Diary of a Law Professor (1991). Yosso, Tara J., Critical Race Counterstories Along the Chicana/o Educational Pipeline (2006).

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IV

LOOKING INWARD

Because politics has a personal dimension, it should come as no surprise that critical race theorists have turned critique inward, examining the interplay of power and authority within minority communities, movements, and even selves. This chapter analyzes several aspects of that interplay—­ intersectionality; antiessentialism; the tensions between nationalism and assimilation; and racial mixture and identity. A . IN T ER S EC T I O N A L I T Y

“Intersectionality” means the examination of race, sex, class, national origin, and sexual orientation and how their combination plays out in various settings. These categories—­a nd still others—­can be separate disadvantaging factors. What happens when an individual occupies more than one of these categories—­for example, is both gay and Native American or both female and Black? Individuals like these operate at an intersection of recognized sites of oppression. Do such cases require that each disadvantaging factor be considered separately, additively, or in yet some other fashion? Should persons who experience multiple forms of oppression have their own categories and representation, apart from those that correspond to the separate 59

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6 0  Looking Inward

varieties of discrimination they experience? And what about the role of these “intersectional” persons in social movements such as feminism or gay liberation? Where do they belong? These are all questions that intersectional analysis attempts to address. Imagine a Black woman. She may be oppressed because of her race. She may also be so because of her gender. If she is a single working mother, she may experience discrimination by virtue of that status as well. She experiences, potentially, not only multiple forms of oppression but ones unique to her and to others like her. Suppose that such a person experiences discrimination at her workplace. She arrives one day to find a new supervisor, who, it turns out, does not like Black women, believing them lazy and unreliable. He also thinks that many of them have an “attitude problem.” So he assigns her disagreeable work, requires her to notify him whenever she leaves her work area, and neglects to advise her of opportunities for promotion for which she is otherwise qualified. She resolves to sue. But on what theory? Suppose she sues for racial discrimination. Her supervisor does, in fact, discriminate against her because she is Black. But suppose it turns out that the supervisor does not dislike Black men and, in fact, treats them well. He likes playing basketball with them after work, discussing sports with them on Monday, and engaging in easy banter with them about music or popular entertainment. Under current law, the supervisor might well successfully defend against a discrimination suit, since he does not discriminate against Black people per se—­just against Black women.

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Suppose, then, that she resolves to sue for sex discrimination. She is, after all, a Black woman, and her supervisor does discriminate against her because of her sex. Once again, however, she might easily lose. The supervisor might show that he is not biased against women as a class and, indeed, enjoys having white women working for him. He finds white women attractive and good, reliable workers. He even occasionally dates one. White women remind him of his sister or mother. He finds younger ones pretty and decorative. He likes having them around. Our plaintiff, then, will probably be unable to prove discrimination based on either race or sex. Yet she suffers discrimination based on her Black womanhood. This is one aspect of the intersectional dilemma. She may face a similar predicament in ordinary politics. Imagine that she wants to join with others in a movement to change society’s treatment of people like her. She might look to the feminist movement for support and solidarity. But she is likely to find that this white-­dominated movement embraces an agenda and a set of concerns that arise out of the white female experience, for example, the glass ceiling, abortion rights, and the election of a female president of the United States. She is more interested in day-­care reform and Head Start programs for her young children. She may also be interested in protection from domestic abuse at the hands of Black men. The feminist movement welcomes her with open arms, for she is one more soldier to add to the ranks. But will its agenda ever get around to addressing her concerns? Imagine, then, that she resolves to join the civil rights movement, hoping to address the type of discrimination that she

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suffers at work. This time she finds that racism is indeed the primary focus of the group. It supports affirmative action, restructuring the criminal justice system to eradicate racial disparities, and electing Black mayors. It supports measures to end racial profiling and highway stops for “driving while Black.” But while these concerns are ones she shares as a Black person, they are not necessarily the ones at the top of her agenda. The male-­ dominated civil rights movement will welcome her and persons like her, needing their numbers, but until women become a significant force within the group, it is apt to afford her concerns scant attention. Movement leaders may even ask her to stuff envelopes, run errands, make phone calls, or make coffee. If she persists in raising her concerns, she may even find herself accused of being divisive. Feminists may tell her to put aside her concerns as a Black woman for a moment, in the interest of a “united” sisterhood, while the Black men may be so caught up with life-­and-­death issues, such as disproportionate imposition of the death penalty or tasering of Black male motorists who do not respond quickly enough to police commands, that they react impatiently to her requests to consider her predicament at work. When movements for racial justice prioritize broad concerns over those of particular subgroups, many needs, such as those of our hypothetical Black woman, may go unaddressed. This is no small problem. Many racial groups are divided along lines of socioeconomic status, politics, religion, sexual orientation, and national origin, each of which generates intersectional individuals. Even within groups that are seemingly homogeneous, one finds attitudinal differences.

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Looking Inward  6 3

Consider, for example, responses to Black criminality. Some members of the Black community hold that not enough of society’s attention goes to law-­abiding Black citizens who are the victims of crime in Black neighborhoods. This get-­tough viewpoint is an example of what has been called a “politics of respectability” and disavows any identification with Black criminality. It wants more, not fewer, police and harsher, not softer, sentences for Black offenders. The opposite perspective within the Black community is sometimes called the “politics of identification.” Persons of this persuasion identify with the “race rebel” aspect of some Black criminals and support them, at least if they are young, redeemable, and a potential asset to the community. African Americans who hold this view want the police to leave certain Black offenders alone and let the community handle them. Antisnitching campaigns in Black neighborhoods are evidence of this attitude. (Some Latino groups do something similar when they shelter or aid undocumented immigrants.) Categories and subgroups, then, are not just matters of theoretical interest. How we frame them determines who has power, voice, and representation and who does not. Perspectivalism, the insistence on examining how things look from the perspective of individual actors, helps us understand the predicament of intersectional individuals. It can enable us to frame approaches that may do justice to a broad range of people and avoid oversimplifying human experience. A related critical tool that has proven useful in this respect is the notion of multiple consciousness, which holds that most of us experience the world in different ways on different

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6 4  Looking Inward

occasions because of who we are. The hope is that if we pay attention to the multiplicity of social life, perhaps our institutions and arrangements will better address the problems that plague us. The growing number of multiracial individuals suggests that this concern will only increase. B . E S SEN T I A L I SM A ND A N T IE S SEN T I A L I SM

Do all oppressed people have something in common? This question lies at the heart of the essentialism/antiessentialism debate. On one level, the answer is obvious: of course all oppressed people have something in common—­their oppression. But the forms of that oppression may vary from group to group. And if they do, the needs and political strategies of groups fighting for social change will vary as well. When a group organizes for social change, it must have a clear concept of what it is fighting to achieve. Essentialism, then, entails a search for the proper unit, or atom, of social analysis and change. When we think of the term “essentializing,” we think of paring something down until the heart of the matter stands alone. Essentialism has a political dimension. As mentioned in the previous section, the goals of a “unified” group may not reflect exactly those of certain factions within it, yet the larger group benefits from their participation because of the increased numbers they bring. We saw this in the case of the single Black mother who sought to identify with a social movement but found herself thwarted on finding that the priorities of the two groups most likely to welcome her did not correspond to her life experience.

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Looking Inward  6 5

This tension seems inherent in our mode of existence. Large numbers of people motivated for social change have the power to alter social practice and perception. This is evident in the early achievements of the women’s and civil rights movements. Today, hardly anyone expresses the view publicly that “women shouldn’t work outside the home” or “people of color are intellectually inferior to whites.” Would these advances in public consciousness have come about if underrepresented subgroups, such as Black women, gay men, or Latino and Asian American Ph.D.s, had decided to sit things out? It takes a multitude of the oppressed to make their voices heard and felt. But what about the voices that do not fit squarely into one single category of oppression? Will social progress let them slip through the cracks? These issues are particularly acute regarding inter-­and intraminority relations and tensions (see chapter 5). They also explain some of the crits’ impatience with liberalism. The reader will recall that CRT takes liberalism to task for its cautious, incremental quality (see chapter 2). When we are tackling a structure as deeply embedded as race, radical measures are in order—­otherwise the system merely swallows up the small improvement one has made and everything goes back to the way it was. Ignoring the problem of intersectionality, as liberalism often does, risks doing things by half measures and leaving major sectors of the population dissatisfied. Classical liberalism also has come in for criticism as overly caught up in the search for universals, such as admissions standards for universities or sentencing guidelines that are the same for all. The crits point out that this approach is apt to do injustice

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6 6  Looking Inward

to individuals whose experience and situation differ from the norm. They instead call for individualized treatment—­ “context”—­that pays attention to minorities’ lives. This deficiency is apt to be particularly glaring in the case of “double minorities,” such as Black women, gay Latinos, or Muslim women wearing head scarves, whose lives are twice removed from the experience of mainstream Americans. Some observers hold that all minority races should compromise their differences and form a united front against racism in general. The danger in this essentialized approach is that certain minority groups, socioeconomic classes, and sexual orientations may end up better off and others worse. Recall how shabbily Black women were treated in the civil rights movement of the 1960s, rarely allowed to speak for the group, made to march behind the men, and relegated, with a few exceptions, to support roles. Only lately have Black women and Latinas emerged as powerful voices on the American scene. Perhaps the essentialism/antiessentialism debate sets in when mainstream thought is beginning to see the validity in the larger groups’ complaints. Like an automobile with deferred maintenance, smaller subgroups, which have largely remained silent, begin bringing suppressed issues to the larger group’s attention. And so the dialectic continues. C. N AT I O N A L I SM V ER SU S A S SIMIL AT I O N

Two friends, William and Jamal, are walking down a main street. Both are African Americans and have been close friends since high school. Both have medium-­brown skin and hazel eyes.

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Looking Inward  6 7

Both are graduates of prestigious universities. William wears a business suit and carries a briefcase made by a famous designer. He is a third-­year associate at a large law firm. Jamal, who is a music-­industry executive making twice as much money as William, is sporting a tasteful kente shirt and wearing his hair in corn rows. On their way to a lunch date to discuss a new recording contract, they talk about mutual friends, their families, and their careers. On arriving at the restaurant, a trendy downtown eating establishment that caters to young professionals, William and Jamal exchange looks, and without speaking William enters first and asks the maitre d’ for a quiet table for two. The two friends illustrate twin poles in the way minorities of color can represent and position themselves. The nationalist, or separatist, position illustrated by Jamal holds that people of color should embrace their culture and origins. Jamal, who by choice lives in an upscale Black neighborhood and sends his children to local schools, could easily fit into mainstream life. But he feels more comfortable working and living in Black milieux and considers that he has a duty to contribute to the minority community. Accordingly, he does as much business as possible with other Black people. The last time he and his family moved, for example, he made several phone calls until he found a Black-­owned moving company. He donates money to several African American philanthropies and colleges. And, of course, his work in the music industry allows him the opportunity to boost the careers of Black musicians, which he does. William also donates to several Black causes. And although he practices law in a white-­dominated law firm on

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6 8  Looking Inward

behalf of corporate clients, most of whom are white, he does pro bono work whenever possible on behalf of prison inmates, a large majority of whom are African American. He lives in an integrated suburb that is 90 percent white with a smattering of Blacks and other people of color, mostly professionals like himself. William and Jamal have discussed their contrasting lifestyles and have agreed to disagree. William believes he is doing more good breaking barriers in the white-­dominated legal world and that his work as a lawyer, especially when he is crowned with the partnership he expects in a few years, will enable him to do some real good on behalf of minority clients and businesses. And even though Jamal is currently making more money than he, William believes that his own top salary as a partner will one day match that of his high school friend. Debates about nationalism versus assimilation figure prominently in current discourse about race. One strand of critical race theory energetically backs the nationalist view, which is particularly prominent with the materialists. Derrick Bell, for example, urged his fellow African Americans to foreswear the struggle for school integration and aim for building the best possible Black schools. Other CRT nationalists advocate gun ownership, on the grounds that historically the police in this country have not protected Black people against violence, indeed have often visited it upon them. Other nationalists urge the establishment of all-­Black inner-­city schools, sometimes just for males, on the grounds that boys of color need strong role models and cannot easily find them in the public schools. Others back Black-­or Latino-­run charter schools in big cities.

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Nationalists of all types question the majoritarian assumption that northern European culture is superior. Most support ethnic studies departments at the university level. At the high school level, a Latino studies program in at least one district (Tucson, Arizona) drew the ire of state officials, who enacted a ban on any program that teaches what they considered ethnic division. The program’s supporters, of course, pointed out that they were merely teaching students their own history and pride in their own culture. They also emphasized that the program was not closed to non-­Latino students and was very popular. When local authorities gave in to state officials’ threat to cut the district’s funding and eliminated the program, the community exploded in outrage. Their indignation increased when school officials removed a number of the program’s texts, which included William Shakespeare’s The Tempest, Paolo Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed, and the very book you are reading, from the shelves of the classrooms, in front of crying students. In response, supporters of the program staged protests, marched on the capital, and filed suit in federal court. A community-­college instructor in Houston organized an automobile caravan hauling trunks full of “wet books” on the banned list all the way to Tucson, where the drivers gave them away to students and passersby on the sidewalks of that city. After a long struggle, the students and their backers prevailed. Gonzalez v. Douglas, 269 F. Supp. 3d 948 (D. Ariz., 2019). Latino nationalists also endorse preservation of the Spanish language and ties with Mexico, Puerto Rico, and the Caribbean or other homelands. A few speak of restoring what

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70  Looking Inward

is now the U.S. Southwest to something like its previous condition—­the mythical land of Aztlán. Both Latino and Black nationalists take a dim view of the effort to deracinate oneself and present oneself as white. Latino nationalists usually reject the term “Hispanic” because of its association with Spain, the nation that oppressed their ancestors in Mexico and Central and South America. Many dislike the neologism “Latinx.” Nationalists honor ethnic studies and history as vital disciplines and look with skepticism on members of their groups who date, marry, or form close friendships with whites or seek employment in white-­ dominated workplaces or industries. Many Latino nationalists are sympathetic to Rodolfo Acuña’s notion that Latinos in this country are an internal colony and that they should exploit that colonial status to build solidarity and resistance. Nationalists are apt to describe themselves as a nation within a nation and to hold that the loyalty and identification of Black people, for example, should lie with that community and only secondarily with the United States. A middle position, embraced by a few sophisticated thinkers, including on occasion Derrick Bell, holds that minorities of color should not try to fit into a flawed economic and political system but transform it. In this view, success, symbolized by a high income, token representation, and even a degree of influence, like that which William hopes to achieve, is not worth pursuing if the system itself remains unworthy and unjust. A moderate position that falls between William’s and Jamal’s holds that it is acceptable for minorities to seek places

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Looking Inward  7 1

in professions such as law, medicine, and business, so long as they apply their skills for the benefit of minority communities. In this view, nothing would be wrong with William’s achievement of an Ivy League degree and bar certificate. But his practice in a corporate penthouse would be problematic; he should be a criminal or legal services lawyer instead. Or if business law is his metier, then, like Jamal, he should be making his skills available to start-­up Black businesses. A final intermediate position, one favoring William, holds that a strong U.S. economy benefits everyone. William’s success as a Black corporate lawyer produces wealth, some of which will trickle down to poor and minority communities; and, in any event, those communities need examples of successful, confident lawyers like William who can make their way anywhere. CL A S SRO O M E X ERCI SE

Divide your class or study group into two or more units according to the aforementioned positions (Jamal’s and William’s). Each confers for ten minutes, selects spokespersons, and then argues the opposite position from the one they really believe. D. R ACI A L MI X T U R E

Imagine that Jamal and William have a third friend, Rebecca, the daughter of a Black father who is a school principal and a mother who is a Lebanese immigrant and a simultaneous

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7 2  Looking Inward

translator for a large international agency. Rebecca, whose skin is medium brown, wears her hair in a short Afro and grew up in an upper-­class suburb, where she attended highly competitive public schools. In college, she was a member of both the Black student caucus (where she met Jamal and William), as well as the international student organization, which she joined in order to meet Middle Eastern people like her mother and practice her Arabic. She is currently a third-­year medical student whose dream job is to be a physician with Doctors Without Borders, practicing medicine in far-­flung areas of the developing world. She and Jamal have had several intense conversations about the medical needs of impoverished Black communities in the United States. Jamal wishes she would devote herself to the needs of domestic people of color. William, who is ambivalent on this issue, is sitting out this discussion. The number of mixed-­race individuals in the United States is growing, as is the number of marriages among members of different minority groups. (See Kenneth Prewitt, Fix the Census’ Archaic Racial Categories, N.Y. Times, Aug. 21, 2013.) Some mixed-­race people have been asking for a category of their own in the U.S. Census and other official classification systems. Otherwise, some feel, they would be forced to disidentify with one side of their family or another. If Rebecca, who could be taken for Black, lists herself that way and selects Black friends as her main peer group, would she not, in effect, be rejecting her mother and her own Middle Eastern parentage?

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Questions and Comments for Chapter IV 1. An Asian woman has been raising her hand at a meeting of white feminists planning a march to protest the “glass ceiling” in corporate management positions. When they finally recognize her, it turns out she wants to know when the group will discuss oppressive labor conditions in the garment industry. Is she being divisive? 2. Suppose the group responds that the agenda should reflect only items that concern all women “as women” and not ones that have to do with small factions, such as seamstresses in the clothing industry. Is the group implicitly adopting a middle-­ class white agenda? 3. Should minorities make an effort to “fit in” in social and work situations? Why or why not? Wouldn’t this just be a lot of extra work? 4. If Blacks or Chicanos sit at separate tables in the cafeteria, is that self-­segregation? Should whites politely ask if they can join them? 5. Should minorities make an effort to do business with minority firms? Assume that Firm A and Firm B offer the same product or service, but one is run by Mr. Gonzalez and the other by a person whose ancestors came over on the Mayflower. Which one should the person of color patronize? Why would it matter? 6. A politician is born in the United States to a white mother and a Black father from Kenya. His parents separate while he is young, and he is raised, first, by his mother and then, when she dies, by his white grandparents, who send him to elite schools. He speaks unaccented English, wears impeccable clothing, and exercises every day. Is he white, Black, or neither?

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7. Can a white person ever pass as Black? Why would he? (See chapter 5.) Have you ever met such a person? Would you want to? 8. Can an assimilated minority-­group member work within the system to bring about reform in a way that a rebellious outsider cannot? 9. Consider Devon Carbado and Mitu Gulati’s notion of performative identity in the workplace, as well as Kenji Yoshino’s concept of “covering,” in which gays and lesbians work hard to conceal their identity from others. In performative identity, according to Carbado and Gulati, some workers of color carry the heavy burden of reassuring their coworkers on a daily basis that they are not threatening, uncouth, incompetent, and jivey. They do all this, of course, in addition to their assigned work, a type of double duty not expected from others. Should minorities indignantly refuse to do this, and what if it endangers their standing at work? 10. Is being an intersectional person always a disadvantage—­or can two disadvantaging factors sometimes cancel each other out so that the intersectional person is better off?

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Sug ge st e d R e a di ng s Acuña, Rodolfo, Occupied America (8th ed. 2014). Austin, Regina, “The Black Community,” Its Lawbreakers, and a Politics of Identification, 65 S. Cal. L. Rev. 1769 (1992). Carbado, Devon, & Mitu Gulati, Working Identity, 85 Cornell L. Rev. 1259 (2000). Collins, Patricia Hill, Black Sexual Politics: African Americans, Gender, and the New Racism (2005). Crenshaw, Kimberlé W., Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex: A Black Feminist Critique of Antidiscrimination Doctrine, Feminist Theory, and Antiracist Politics, 1989 U. Chi. Legal F. 139. Critical Race Feminism: A Reader (Adrien K. Wing ed., 2d ed. 2003). Delgado, Richard, Rodrigo’s Reconsideration: Intersectionality and the Future of Critical Race Theory, 96 Iowa L. Rev. 1247 (2011). Harpalani, Vinay, Desicrit: Theorizing the Racial Ambiguity of South Asian Americans, 67 N.Y.U. Ann. Surv. Am. L. 77 (2013). Harris, Angela P., Race and Essentialism in Feminist Legal Theory, 42 Stan. L. Rev. 581 (1990). MacKinnon, Catharine A., From Practice to Theory, or What Is a White Woman, Anyway?, 4 Yale J.L. & Feminism 13 (1991). Mixed-­Race America and the Law: A Reader (Kevin R. Johnson ed., 2003). Nunn, Kenneth B., Law as a Eurocentric Enterprise, 15 Law & Ineq. J. 323 (1997).

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Onwuachi-­Willig, Angela, A House Divided: The Invisibility of the Multiracial Family, 44 Harv. C.R.-­C .L. L. Rev. 231 (2009). Yancy, George, Who Is White? Latinos, Asians, and the New Black/Nonblack Divide (2003). Yoshino, Kenji, Covering: The Hidden Assault on Our Civil Rights (2007).

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V

POWER AND THE SHAPE OF KNOWLEDGE

Building on the previous chapter, we now consider further issues dealing with categories and power. Chapter 4 concerned the role of small subgroups within civil rights communities. This chapter addresses how we think about race and identity—­the black-­white binary, critical white studies, and Asian and Latino critical thought. Some of these issues are explosive, controversial, even divisive. A . T HE BL ACK-­W HI T E BIN A RY

One of the more contentious issues in American racial thought today is whether the very framework we use to consider problems of race reflects an implicit binary paradigm or mindset. That paradigm, the black-­white binary, effectively dictates that non-­Black minority groups must compare their treatment to that of African Americans to redress their grievances. The paradigm holds that one group, Black people, constitutes the prototypical minority group. “Race” means, quintessentially, African American. Others, such as Asians, American Indians, and Latinos, are minorities only insofar as their experience and treatment can be analogized to those of Black people.

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Imagine, for example, that Juan Dominguez, a Puerto Rican worker, is told by his boss, “You’re a lazy Puerto Rican just like all the rest. You’ll never get ahead as long as I’m supervisor.” Juan sues for workplace discrimination under a civil rights–­era statute designed, as most are, with Black people in mind. He wins because he can show that an African American worker, treated in similar fashion, would be entitled to redress. But suppose that Juan’s coworkers and supervisor make fun of him because of his accent, religion, or place of birth. African Americans generally do not suffer discrimination on these grounds, so Juan would likely go without recourse. The black-­white binary is said to operate in everyday culture as well. Imagine that a group of liberal television executives says to each other, “Let’s have a minority sitcom.” The group is well-­meaning, but their thoughts are apt to go to a program whose central characters are a Black family. Later, on second thought, they might add an Asian maid or a Latino teenager who is a friend of one of the family’s children. But the essential framework for the program is likely to revolve around African American problems, in-­jokes, and situations. Similarly, history textbooks may devote considerable space to the tremendously significant issue of slavery but overlook or devote scant treatment to the intense persecution of Chinese in California and elsewhere. Many may also ignore the equally important role of Conquest and the wars with Mexico and Spain in shaping Latino history. Even rarer would be a textbook that discusses the recent wave of intense anti-­Muslim suspicion that gripped the country in the years following 9/11

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or Central American children separated from their families at detention centers at the United States–­Mexico border. A closely related concept is that of Black, or any other kind of, exceptionalism. Exceptionalism holds that a group’s history is so distinctive that placing it at the center of analysis is, in fact, warranted. For example, when a recent president convened a group of scholars and activists to lead a yearlong national conversation on race, at its first meeting, the chair, an eminent African American historian, proposed that the group “for the sake of simplicity” limit its consideration to African Americans. When other members of the commission protested, he backed down, still insisting that he was right. Because “America cut its eyeteeth” on discrimination against Black people, he said, if one understood that sordid history, one would also understand and know how to deal with racism against all the other groups. Regardless of what one thinks about exceptionalism, critics of the black-­white binary do make at least one valid point. The differential racialization thesis, mentioned earlier in this book (see chapter 1) and embraced by most contemporary students of race, maintains that each disfavored group in this country has been racialized in its own individual way and according to the needs of the majority group at particular times in its history. Few Black people will be yelled at and accused of being foreigners or of destroying the automobile industry. Few will be told that if they don’t like it here, they should go back where they came from. Few (except those who are foreign-­born) will be ridiculed on account of their unpronounceable last names or singsong accent. Few will have a

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vigilante, police officer, teacher, or social worker demand to see their papers, passport, or green card. Few will be asked if they are terrorists. By the same token, few Asian-­looking people will be accused of being welfare leeches or having too many children out of wedlock. Thus, different racial groups can react disparately to racial slurs [citing cases of Blacks and Mexicans subjected to racist epithets]. . . . Due to this distinction, we hold that in an intentional infliction of emotional distress claim arising out of an allegation of racial harassment, the plaintiff ’s race must shape the objective inquiry into the severity of the distress. Taylor v. Metzger, 706 A.2d 685, 698 (N.J. 1998)

Long preoccupied with issues of identity, American society prefers to place its citizens into boxes on the basis of physical attributes and culture. No science supports this practice; it is simply a matter of habit and convenience. Like other paradigms, the black-­white one allows people to simplify and make sense of a complex reality. And, of course, it is helpful in looking at the historical and ongoing relationship between Black and white Americans. The risk is that non-­ Black minority groups, not fitting into the dominant society’s idea of race in America, become marginalized, invisible, foreign, un-­American. The black-­white—­or any other—­binary paradigm of race not only simplifies analysis dangerously, presenting racial progress as a linear progression; it can end up injuring the

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very group, for example, Black people, that one places at the center of discussion. It weakens solidarity, reduces opportunities for coalition, deprives a group of the benefits of the others’ experiences, makes it excessively dependent on the approval of the white establishment, and sets it up for ultimate disappointment. Consider some of the ways this can happen. The history of minorities in the United States shows that while one group is gaining ground, another is often losing it. For example, in 1846 the United States waged a bloodthirsty war against Mexico in which it seized about one-­half of that nation’s territory. Later, Anglo lawyers and land-­hungry settlers colluded with courts and local authorities to deprive the Mexicans who chose to remain in the conquered territory of their lands, which were guaranteed by the peace treaty. Yet, only a few years later, the North gallantly fought an equally bloody war against the South, ostensibly to free the slaves. During Reconstruction, slavery was abolished and important legislation enacted for the benefit of the newly freed Black people. Yet at the very same time, Congress was passing the despised Indian Appropriations Act, providing that no Indian nation would be an independent entity capable of entering into a treaty with the United States. To make matters worse, not long afterward, the Dawes Act broke up land the tribes held in common, resulting in the loss of almost two-­ thirds of all Indian land. And in 1882 Congress passed the Chinese Exclusion Act; earlier California had made it a crime to employ Chinese workers. Binary thinking, which focuses on just two groups, usually whites and one other, can thus conceal the checkerboard of

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racial progress and retrenchment and hide the way dominant society often casts minority groups against one another to the detriment of each. Immediately after the Civil War, the army recruited newly freed slaves to serve as Buffalo Soldiers putting down Indian rebellions in the West. Not long after, southern plantation owners urged replacing their former slaves with Chinese labor. Congress acquiesced. Consider, as well, Justice Harlan’s dissent in Plessy v. Ferguson, reproduced in part in chapter 2 of this book, which sharply rebuked segregation for Black people but supported his point by disparaging the Chinese, who did have the right to ride in railway cars with whites. In more recent times, during California’s Proposition 187 campaign, proponents for this anti-­immigrant measure sought Black votes by depicting Mexican immigrants as newcomers who took Black jobs. And in recent years, anti-­immigration forces whip up public sentiment against Muslims in minority and blue-­collar communities by appealing to their patriotism. In addition to pitting one minority group against another, binary thinking can induce a minority group to identify with whites in exaggerated fashion at the expense of other groups. For example, early in California’s history, Asians sought to be declared white so that they could attend schools for whites and not have to go to ones with Black people. And in the Southwest, early litigators for Mexican Americans pursued an “other white” policy, arguing that segregation of Mexican Americans was illegal because local law countenanced segregation against Black people only. Community-­betterment organizations like the League of United Latin American Citi-

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zens reacted to rampant discrimination against their members by insisting that society treat Latinos as whites. Anglocentric standards of beauty divide Mexican and Black communities, enabling those who most closely conform to the Euro-­American ideal to gain jobs, desirable mates, and social acceptance, and, sometimes, to look down on their darker-­skinned brothers and sisters. Similarly, “box checking” allows some mixed-­race people of white or near-­ white appearance to gain the benefits of affirmative action without suffering the costs of being thought of and treated as Black or brown. Black-­white or any other kind of binary thinking can also cause a minority group to go along with a recurring ploy in which whites select a particular group—­usually a small, nonthreatening one—­to serve as tokens and overseers of the others. Minorities who fall into this trap hope to gain status, while whites can tell themselves that they are not racists because they have employed a certain number of suitably grateful minorities as supervisors, assistant deans, and directors of human relations. Finally, dichotomous thinking and exceptionalism impair the ability of groups to form coalitions. For example, neither the NAACP nor any other predominantly African American organization filed an amicus brief challenging Japanese internment in the World War II case of Korematsu v. United States. As mentioned earlier, a politically moderate litigation organization of Latinos distanced itself from other minority groups and even from darker-­skinned Latinos by pursuing an “other white” strategy during the middle years of the twen-

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tieth century. And in Northern California, Asians, Mexican Americans, and Blacks have been at loggerheads over admission to prestigious Lowell High School in San Francisco, the University of California at Berkeley, and UCLA. Will minority groups learn to put aside narrow nationalisms and binary thinking and work together to confront the forces that suppress them all? It would seem that they have much to gain, but old patterns of thought die hard. If contextualism and critical theory teach anything, it is that we rarely challenge our own preconceptions, privileges, and the standpoint from which we reason. Although not as permanent as race or color, an accent is not easily changed for a person who was born and lived in a foreign country for a good length of time. This court cannot give legal cognizance to adverse employment decisions made simply because a person speaks with a foreign accent. The court would recognize that in some instances a foreign accent may actually prevent a person from performing tasks required for employment or promotion, . . . but otherwise, an employer should not make adverse employment decisions simply because a person possesses an accent resulting from birth and life in a foreign country. It is the court’s opinion from the evidence and the observation of the plaintiff ’s speech at trial that his accent did not impair his ability to communicate or prevent him from performing any tasks required of the supervisor of the old dental laboratory. . . . Consequently, this court finds that the decision to demote the plaintiff from the supervisory position

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in the old laboratory was made on the basis of his national origin and related accent, and that this decision violated the rights of the plaintiff under the provisions of Title VII. Carino v. University of Oklahoma, 25 Fair Empl. Proc. Cas. (BNA) 1332 (W.D. Okla. 1981)

B . CR I T I CA L W HI T E S T U D IE S

Another area of critical investigation is the study of the white race. For several centuries, at least, social scientists have been studying communities of color, discoursing learnedly about their histories, habits, problems, and future prospects. Now a new generation of scholars has put whiteness under the lens and examined the construction of the white race. If, as most contemporary thinkers believe, race is not objective or biologically significant but constructed by social sentiment and power struggle, how did the white race in America come to exist, that is, how did it come to define itself? Ian Haney López, Cheryl Harris, Tim Wise, David Roediger, Alexander Saxton, and Theodore Allen address various aspects of this issue. The physical differences between light-­skinned Blacks and dark-­skinned whites, just to take one example, are much less marked than those that separate polar members of either group. Why then do we draw the lines the way we do? Addressing this question includes examining what it means to be white, how whiteness became established legally, how certain groups moved in and out of the white race, “passing,” the one-­drop rule,

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the phenomena of white power and white supremacy, and the array of privileges that come with membership in the dominant race. In the semantics of popular culture, whiteness is often associated with innocence and goodness. Brides wear white on their wedding day to signify purity. “Snow White” is a universal fairy tale of virtue receiving its just reward. In talk of near-­death experiences, many patients report a blinding white light, perhaps a projection of a hoped-­for union with a positive and benign spiritual force. In contrast, darkness and blackness often carry connotations of evil and menace. One need only read Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad to see how strongly imagery of darkness conjures evil and terror. We speak of a black gloom. Persons deemed unacceptable to a group are said to be blackballed or blacklisted. Villains are often depicted as swarthy or wearing black clothing or hats. Whiteness is also normative; it sets the standard in dozens of situations. It may even be a kind of property interest. Other groups, such as American Indians, Latinos, Asian Americans, and African Americans, are described as nonwhite. That is, they are defined in relation or opposition to whiteness—­t hat which they are not. Literature and the media sometimes reinforce this view of minorities as the exotic other. Minorities appear in villain roles or as romantic, oversexed lovers. Science-­fiction movies and television programs portray extraterrestrials with minority-­like features and skin color.

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If literature and popular culture reinforce white superiority, law and courts have done so as well. In the fifty years or so following the Civil War, a large influx of people sought admission to the United States, making immigration policy a point of great concern. The last decade of the nineteenth century and first two of the twentieth were a period of particularly heavy immigration. Who was the young country going to let in? In 1790 Congress had limited naturalization (acquisition of U.S. citizenship) to free white persons only. With minor modifications, this racial qualification stood on the books until 1952. During the more than 150 years that the requirement remained in place, U.S. courts decided many cases determining who was white and who was not. Are Indians from India white? What about Persians? Or light-­skinned Japanese? Or children of mixed marriages, with a father from Canada and a mother from Indonesia? Judges developed two tests—­ “science” and “common knowledge”—­to decide these questions. Reading the history of these strained, often overtly racist judicial opinions does much to dispel any notion that the American judiciary is fair, consistent, or wise. The legal definition of whiteness took shape in the context of immigration law, as courts decided who was to have the privilege of living in the United States. As many ordinary citizens did, judges defined the white race in opposition to Blackness or some other form of otherness, an opposition that also marked a boundary between privilege and its opposite. Only those who were deemed white were worthy of entry into our community.

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The appellant is a person of the Japanese race born in Japan [who] applied to the United States District Court for the Territory of Hawaii to be admitted as a citizen of the United States. His petition was opposed by the United States District Attorney. . . . Including the period of his residence in Hawaii, appellant had continuously resided in the United States for 20 years. He was a graduate of the Berkeley, Cal. high school, had been nearly three years a student in the University of California, had educated his children in American schools, his family had attended American churches and he had maintained the use of the English language in his home. That he is well qualified by character and education for citizenship is conceded. The District Court  .  .  . however, held that, having been born in Japan and being of the Japanese race, he was not eligible to naturalization under section 2169 of the Revised Statutes . . . and denied the petition. . . . On behalf of the appellant it is urged that we should give to [section 2169] the meaning which it had in the minds of its original framers in 1790 and that it was employed by them for the sole purpose of excluding the black or African race and the Indians then inhabiting this country.  .  .  . It is not enough to say that the framers did not have in mind the brown or yellow races of Asia. It is necessary to go farther and be able to say that had these particular races been suggested the language of the act would have been so varied as to include them within its privileges. The appellant, in the case now under consideration . . . is clearly of a race which is not Caucasian. Takao Ozawa v. United States, 260 U.S. 178, 189–­90, 195, 198 (1922)

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Another aspect of the construction of whiteness is the way certain groups have moved into or out of that race. For example, early in our history Irish, Jews, Italians, and Slavs were considered nonwhite—­that is, on a par with African Americans. Over time, they earned the prerogatives and social standing of whites by a process that included joining labor unions, swearing fealty to the Democratic Party, and acquiring wealth, sometimes by illegal or underground means. Whiteness, it turns out, is not only valuable; it is shifting and malleable. A recent manifestation of white consciousness is its exaggerated form seen in white-­supremacy and white-­power groups. With these organizations, white solidarity presents problems and dangers that Black solidarity does not. When members of a minority group band together for social and political support, most observers will see that action as a natural and proper response against social pressures. But what if members of the majority race band together to promote their interests at the expense of those very same minorities? The formation of Aryan-­supremacist and skinhead groups stands as a constant reminder of how easy it is for quiet satisfaction in being white to deteriorate into extremism. As we write, white nationalists are urging each other to “take back our country.” They advance a “replacement theory,” in which persons of color and immigrants threaten to supplant whites and change the culture that they have worked for years to develop. Some early rallies featured signs lampooning President Barack Obama or depicting him with exaggerated racial features. A subsequent president deplored immigration from “s___hole countries” and advocated more entrants from Norway instead.

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“White privilege” refers to the myriad of social advantages, benefits, and courtesies that come with being a member of the dominant race. Imagine a Black man and a white man, equally qualified, interviewing for the same position in a business. The interviewer is white. The white candidate may feel more at ease with the interviewer because of the social connections he enjoys as a member of the same group. The interviewer may ask the white candidate to play golf later. Under the impression that few Black people golf, and not wishing to offend, he may not invite the Black candidate to play. This example becomes especially telling when one considers that most corporate positions of power, despite token inroads, are still in the hands of whites. According to a famous list compiled by Peggy McIntosh, white people enjoy and can rely on forty-­six privileges that attach by reason of having white skin, including the assurance that store clerks will not follow them around, that people will not cross the street to avoid them at night, that their achievements will not be regarded as exceptional or “credits to their race,” and that their occasional mistakes will not be attributed to biological inferiority. Scholars of white privilege write that white people benefit from a system of favors, exchanges, and courtesies from which outsiders of color are frequently excluded, including hiring one’s neighbors’ kids for summer jobs, a teacher’s agreement to give a favored student an extra-­credit assignment that will enable him or her to raise a grade of B+ to A−, or the kind of quiet networking that lands a borderline candidate a coveted position.

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This has prompted one commentator to remark that our system of race is like a two-­headed hydra. One head consists of outright racism—­the oppression of some people on grounds of who they are. The other consists of white privilege—­a system by which whites help and buoy each other up. If one lops off a single head, say, outright racism, but leaves the other intact, our system of white over Black/brown will remain virtually unchanged. The predicament of social reform, as one writer pointed out, is that “everything must change at once.” Otherwise, change is swallowed up by the remaining elements, so that we remain roughly as we were before. Culture replicates itself forever and ineluctably. A version of white privilege sometimes appears in discussions of affirmative action. Many whites feel that these programs victimize them, that more-­qualified white candidates will be required to sacrifice their positions to less-­qualified minorities. So, is affirmative action a case of “reverse discrimination” against whites? Part of the argument that it is rests on an implicit assumption of innocence on the part of the white person displaced by affirmative action. The narrative behind this assumption characterizes whites as innocent, a powerful metaphor, and Black people as—­what? Presumably, the opposite of innocent—­namely, guilty. They are like thieves who enter where they do not belong and take things that others have worked hard for. By contrast, many critical race theorists and social scientists hold that racism is pervasive, systemic, and deeply ingrained. If we take this perspective, then no white member of society seems quite so innocent. The interplay of meanings that one

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attaches to race; the stereotypes one holds of other people; the standards of looks, appearance, and beauty; and the need to guard one’s own position all powerfully determine one’s perspective. Indeed, one aspect of whiteness, according to some scholars, is its ability to seem perspectiveless or transparent. Whites do not see themselves as having a race but as being, simply, people. They do not believe that they think and reason from a white viewpoint but from a universally valid one—­ “the truth”—­what everyone knows. By the same token, many whites will strenuously deny that they have benefited from white privilege, even in situations like the ones mentioned throughout this book (golf, summer jobs, extra-­credit assignments, merchants who smile). (See Marianne Bertrand & Sendhil Mullainathan, Are Emily and Greg More Employable than Lakisha and Jamal?, 94 Am. Econ. Rev. 991 [Sept. 2004].) CL A S SRO O M E X ERCI SE

Imagine a Russian Jewish girl, orphaned at the age of two, who immigrates to the United States at the age of fifteen without a penny or knowledge of English. She attends night school while working as a supermarket bagger during the day and plans to attend a community college and major in premed studies. The person is white with blue eyes and blond hair. Is she privileged? Unprivileged? Privileged in some respects but not others? Divide into small groups and argue this question. Then ask yourselves whether white privilege has any application beyond a narrow circle of elite prep-­school products.

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C. OT HER D E V EL O PMEN T S : L AT IN O A ND A SI A N CR I T I CA L T H O U G H T, CR I T I CA L R ACE F EMINISM , L G B TQ T HEO RY

As the bright lines of the black-­white binary began to blur, critical Asian and Latino thinkers felt freer to put forward their own unique perspectives. Invigorated, perhaps, by the antiessentialist strand of critical race theory, LatCrit scholars have called attention to such issues as immigration, language rights, bilingual schooling, internal colonialism, sanctuary for Latin American refugees, and census categories for Latinos. They have begun challenging “proxy discrimination,” in which a discriminator targets a Latino on the basis of a foreign accent, name, or ancestry. They reexamine documents such as the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in search of sources of protection for land, culture, and language rights. (See Lobato v. Taylor, 71 P.3d 938 [Colo. 2002]; Mabo v. Queensland, 1991 WL 1290806 [HCA 1992].) Like Asians, many Latinos vigorously oppose the English-­only movement and engage in spirited discussions of passing and assimilation (see chapter 4). They deploy the sociological notion of nativism to name and explain the recent spate of measures aimed at foreigners and immigrants, including “probable cause” laws that encourage police to stop and question the foreign-­looking or to punish anyone who aids, hires, or rents an apartment to an undocumented person. They point out that nativism against Latinos and Asians thrives during times of economic hardship, when the labor supply is glutted, when workers are insecure, and when politicians rail against

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foreigners supposedly taking American jobs. Both groups staunchly resist the black-­white paradigm but try to maintain friendly relations with African Americans. They also support immigration activists, such as the student “Dreamers” and their families who are protesting draconian immigration policies and deportation. They support histories of non-­Black minority groups, such as the Ellis Island Immigration Museum’s exhibit showing stories of Mexican border-­crossers and their routes and travails. Some Asian American writers focus on accent discrimination and the “model minority myth,” according to which Asians are seen as the perfect minority group—­quiet and industrious, with intact families and high academic aspiration and achievement. This myth is unfair to the numerous Asian subgroups such as Hmong and Pacific Islanders who are likely to be poor and in need of assistance. It also causes resentment among other disfavored groups, such as African Americans, who find themselves blamed for not being as successful as Asians supposedly are. (“If they can make it, why can’t you?”). Allied with the model minority myth is the idea that Asians are too successful—­soulless, humorless drones whose home countries are at fault for the United States’ periodic economic troubles. Such was the tragic fate of the Chinese American Vincent Chin, killed in 1982 by two Detroit autoworkers upset with Japan for destroying the U.S. automotive industry by producing better cars. To make matters worse, American courts have sometimes been reluctant to punish such racially motivated crimes against Asians, handing out

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light sentences. For murdering Chin, the two attackers received sentences of three years’ probation and small fines. Neither served a day in jail. During World War II, when over one hundred thousand Japanese families living on the West Coast were removed to internment camps where they spent years behind barbed wire, many losing homes, farms, and businesses in the process, few Americans protested. It turned out later that much of the evidence of disloyalty and espionage was fabricated. Indeed, most Japanese Americans, interned or not, supported the war effort, and many young Japanese Americans served honorably in the U.S. armed forces, fighting against the Nazis in Europe and serving as interpreters in the battle against Japan. Despite this sorry chapter in U.S. history, the United States was slow to consider compensating the Japanese for their losses. The descendants of Japanese Americans endured a legacy of suspicion and prejudice. A reparations bill did not enter into force until 1988. Gordon Hirabayashi is an American citizen who was born in Seattle, Washington, in 1918, and is currently Professor Emeritus of Sociology at the University of Alberta. He is of Japanese ancestry. In 1942 he was living in Seattle and was therefore subject to wartime orders requiring all persons of Japanese ancestry, whether citizens or not, to remain within their residences between 8:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. He was also subject to subsequent orders to report to a Civilian Control Station for . . . exclusion from the military area. Hirabayashi refused to honor the curfew or to report to the control sta-

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tion because he believed that the military orders were based upon racial prejudice and violated the protection the Constitution affords to all citizens. The Supreme Court reviewed his conviction for violating the curfew order and unanimously affirmed. . . . In his coram nobis petition, Hirabayashi contended that the original report [by West Coast authorities]  .  .  . and recently discovered related documents [proved] that the curfew and exclusion orders were in fact based upon racial prejudice rather than military exigency. . . . The judgment . . . is reversed and the matter is remanded with instructions to grant Hirabayashi’s petition to vacate both convictions. Hirabayashi v. United States, 828 F.2d 591, 592–­93, 608 (9th Cir. 1987)

Despite this sorry chapter, in the 2016 presidential campaign, one candidate supported banning Muslims from admission to the United States by citing, approvingly, President Franklin Roosevelt’s executive order assigning the Japanese to wartime internment camps. Finally, in recent years a number of scholars of color have been examining issues at the intersection of feminism, sexual orientation, and critical race theory. Critical race feminism addresses issues of intersectionality, like those described in chapter 4. It also examines relations between men and women of color; sterilization of Black, Latina, and Indian women; and the impact of changes in welfare, family policies,

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and child-­support laws. It also analyzes the way the “reasonable man” standard that operates in many areas of the law incorporates a white male bias, making it difficult for a woman or a nonwhite person to receive justice in American courts. LGBTQ (“queer-­crit”) theorists examine the interplay between sexual norms and race. Why are Latino males sometimes depicted as ardent lovers, or Asian men as sexless or effeminate? Are sex and sexual orientation part of the construction of minority racial status? And what about the civil rights movement or Chicano liberation—­are they historically homophobic? Accidentally or inherently so? Are gays and lesbians marginalized by the need of these groups to appear exemplary, all-­American?

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Questions and Comments for Chapter V 1. If an African American asserts that, because of slavery, Black people truly are exceptional and should receive priority over other groups in jobs and social programs, is he or she asserting a form of property interest in Blackness? (See Cheryl Harris, Whiteness as Property, 106 Harv. L. Rev. 1707 [1993].) Is he or she demonstrating ignorance of other groups’ histories? 2. Does white privilege exist? If so, give an example. Is there such a thing as Black, Chicano, or Asian privilege? How about the privilege to laugh uproariously with one’s friends? 3. If slavery is the central, foundational element in Blacks’ history in the United States, what serves that function for Latinos? For Indians? For Asians? 4. If it is legitimate for a school to have a Black or Latino student organization, is it equally legitimate to allow white students to form a white student organization? And to use student fees to fund it? 5. Would it not be logical for Black people, Latinos, Asians, and Native Americans to unite in one powerful coalition to confront the power system that is oppressing them all? If so, what prevents them from doing so? 6. Are Latinos and American Indians exceptional? Asian Americans? Are all the groups exceptional? 7. Which groups should have a category in the U.S. Census? During certain periods, Latinos have had a category of their own, but at other times, they have not. Are they a race? An ethnicity? What is a Hispanic? 8. Should multiracial people have a census category? Several? How many?

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9. Suppose that a Latino worker’s coworkers make fun of his lunch food, calling him a “taco eater.” They also joke about his family’s being “wetbacks” and his friends “lettuce pickers.” (See Alvarado v. Shipley Donut Flour & Supply Co., Inc., 526 F. Supp. 2d 746 [S.D. Tex. 2007]; Lopez v. Union Car. Co., 8 F. Supp. 2d 832 [N.D. Ind. 1998]; Machado v. Goodman Mfg. Co., 10 F. Supp. 2d 709 [S.D. Tex. 1997].) Is this racial discrimination for which the worker can sue under a federal civil rights statute? If your answer is no, is that because you have adopted, whether you realize it or not, a black-­white binary paradigm of race? 10. Is a police program that keeps an eye on Muslims and mosques racist? Or is it merely a sensible measure aimed at improving the security of all Americans? Will it go down in history as a shameful action like Japanese internment?

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Sug ge st e d R e a di ng s Allen, Theodore, The Invention of the White Race, Vols. 1–­2 (1994, 1997). Bayoumi, Moustafa, How Does It Feel to Be a Problem: Being Young and Arab in America (2009). Brooks, Roy L. & Kirsten Widner, In Defense of the Black/White Binary: Reclaiming a Tradition of Civil Rights Scholarship, 12 Berkeley J. Afr.-­Am. L. & Pol’y 107 (2010). Critical White Studies: Looking Behind the Mirror (Richard Delgado & Jean Stefancic eds., 1997). Delgado, Richard, Derrick Bell’s Toolkit: Fit to Dismantle That Famous House?, 75 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 283 (2000). DiAngelo, Robin, White Fragility: Why It’s so Hard for White People to Talk About Race in America (2018). Feagin, Joe R., The White Racial Frame: Centuries of Racial Framing and Counter-­framing (2009). Gomez, Laura, Manifest Destinies: The Making of the Mexican American Race (2007). Haney López, Ian F., White by Law: The Legal Construction of Race (10th Anniversary ed., 2006). Harris, Cheryl I., Whiteness as Property, 106 Harv. L. Rev. 1707 (1993). Ignatiev, Noel, Race Traitor (various dates); Treason to Whiteness Is Loyalty to Humanity (2022). Isenberg, Nancy, White Trash: The 400-­Year Untold History of Class in America (2016). Jacobson, Matthew Frye, Whiteness of a Different Color: European Immigrants and the Alchemy of Race, 1999.

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McIntosh, Peggy, White Privilege and Male Privilege: A Personal Account of Coming to See Correspondences Through Work in Women’s Studies (1988). Perea, Juan F., The Black/White Binary Paradigm of Race, 85 Cal. L. Rev. 1213 (1997). Roediger, David R., The Wages of Whiteness: Race and the Making of the American Working Class (paperback ed., 2007); Working Toward Whiteness: How America’s Immigrants Became White (2018). Ross, Thomas, Innocence and Affirmative Action, 43 Vand. L. Rev. 297 (1990). Takaki, Ronald T., Strangers from a Different Shore: A History of Asian Americans (rev. ed., 1998). Wildman, Stephanie, with contributions by Margalynne Armstrong, Adrienne D. Davis & Trina Grillo, Privilege Revealed: How Invisible Preference Undermines America (1996). Williams, Robert A., Savage Anxieties: The Invention of Western Civilization (2012). Wise, Tim, Dispatches from the Race War (2020). Wu, Frank, Yellow: Race in America Beyond Black and White (paperback ed., 2003).

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VI

CRITIQUES AND RESPONSES TO CRITICISM

As Thomas Kuhn has shown, paradigms resist change. It should come as no surprise, then, that critical race theory, which seeks to change the reigning paradigm of civil rights thought, has sparked resistance. During the movement’s early years, the media treated critical race theory respectfully. As it matured, however, academic critics felt freer to speak out. Some of the areas that drew attention are storytelling; the critique of merit, truth, and objectivity; and the matter of voice. Beginning in late 2020, however, a number of followers of former President Donald J. Trump mounted a different kind of attack. A . “E X T ER N A L” CR I T I CI SM

1. Early Critiques Among the initial critiques, one by Randall Kennedy and another by Daniel Farber and Suzanna Sherry are notable. Kennedy took issue with the idea that minority scholars speak in a unique “voice” about racial issues. He also took the movement to task for accusing mainstream scholars of ignoring the contributions of writers of color, an accusation that had found its most forceful expression in Richard Delgado’s “Imperial Scholar” article. Kennedy reasoned that legal 102

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scholarship is like a marketplace. Good articles and books attract “buyers”—­recognition, citation, reprintings. Thus, pointing out that certain texts have fallen into a void does not, by itself, prove discrimination. It is first necessary, he wrote, to establish that those articles were of high quality and deserved recognition. Kennedy thus charged the crits with failing to examine their premises and painting themselves as victims when they had not shown that they deserved better treatment than they had received. A few years later, professors Farber (University of Minnesota Law School) and Sherry (Vanderbilt Law School) accused critical race theorists of hiding behind personal stories and narratives to advance their agenda, as well as of lacking respect for traditional notions of truth and merit. Citing the example of Jews and Asians—­two minority groups that have achieved high levels of success by conventional standards—­ they argued against the idea that the deck is stacked against minorities. If conventional tests and standards are unfair and biased against minorities, as the crits assert, how can one account for the success of these two groups? Did they cheat or take unfair advantage? Are they unimaginative mimics and drones? All possible explanations are implausible. Therefore, CRT’s critique of merit is implicitly anti-­Semitic and anti-­Asian. The crits’ responses were not long in coming. In a series of articles, including a special colloquy in the Harvard Law Review, critical race theorists and their defenders argued that Randall Kennedy himself was guilty of misstatement and an unsympathetic reading of CRT texts. Because Kennedy ap-

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proached the new movement through conventional criteria, he missed opportunities to help take racial analysis to a new level. As for Farber and Sherry, the crits replied that if Asians and Jews succeeded despite an unfair system, this is all to their credit. But why should pointing out unfairness in universal merit standards, like the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT), bespeak a negative attitude toward members of those groups? As the crits saw it, Farber and Sherry confused criticism of a standard with criticism of individuals who performed well under that standard. Recently, outside the academy, the right wing has mounted a furious attack on critical race theory, with conservative bloggers, talk-­radio hosts, think-­tankers, and even angry moms leading the way. With the advent of the Obama presidency, detractors had stepped up their assault, some trying to link the nation’s first Black president with the critical race theory guru Derrick Bell, who taught at Harvard during the time when the young Obama studied law there. Others charged that with his presidency, the nation had overcome its racist past and that no further efforts were necessary.

2. Trump and His Followers In September 2020, toward the end of his presidency, Donald Trump listened to an attack on critical race theory on Fox News by a hitherto little-­known commentator named Christopher Rufo, who was a member of a small think tank, the Discovery Institute in Seattle, Washington, that advocates

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Creationism and Intelligent Design. Rufo also favors tough-­ love treatment of homeless people and the insane. His broadside struck a chord with Trump, who amplified many of Rufo’s ideas later that month in an hourlong diatribe against critical race theory at the National Archives Museum and issued an executive order prohibiting the teaching of certain ideas unpopular with his base. Although President Joe Biden repealed the order when he became president, Trump’s followers had incorporated much of its substance in an attack on teachers and school boards that they deemed in cahoots with the CRT movement. Several state legislatures sided with the attackers, enacting bills prohibiting teaching anti-­American ideas or propounding “divisive messages.” They also banned teaching that the United States is an inherently racist country, that white people enjoy privileged positions, or that people now alive bear guilt for past atrocities like slavery or Jim Crow. By March 2021, Rufo was able to tweet: We have successfully frozen their brand—­c ritical race theory—­into the public conversation and are steadily driving up negative perceptions. We will eventually turn it toxic, as we put all of the various cultural insanities under that brand category. . . . The goal is to have the public read something crazy in the newspaper and immediately think “critical race theory.” We have decodified the term and will recodify it to annex the entire range of cultural constructions that are unpopular with Americans. Christopher Rufo, March 15, 2021

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Readers of this book will realize that critical race theory does not teach these things, and anyone who has attended a K–­12 school in recent years knows that CRT is a law school or graduate-­level class hardly ever taught in the early years. At the time this edition went to press, the attack was beginning to lose force as the country’s attention turned to the ongoing COVID pandemic, voting rights, and gun laws, but upcoming elections may give it renewed strength. B . “IN T ER N A L” CR I T I CI SM

In addition to responding to outside criticism, critical race theory has engaged in intensive self-­criticism, often outside the public view. This critique takes two forms, one having to do with the pragmatic, on-­the-­ground value of critical race theorizing, the other with the worth of the theories themselves.

1. The Activist Critiques Is critical race theory pragmatic? Some of the issues that arise in the internal critique (self-­criticism) are ones any new movement might expect to address. What is its practical worth? Why is it not down in the trenches, helping activists deal with domestic violence, poor schools, and police brutality? Why is it so hard on liberals or so disdainful of existing civil rights statutes and remedies? What is the purpose of critique unless one has something better to replace it with? Should crits work together in an interracial coalition

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or separately, with Blacks and Latinos, for example, pursuing slightly different agendas? Should whites be welcome in the movement and at its workshops and conferences? Should the movement expand to include religious discrimination, against Jews and Muslims, for example? To the extent that a cohesive set of answers has emerged from self-­criticism, one may summarize by noting that most crits agree that theory and practice need to work together. Street activists need new theories to challenge a social order that treats minority communities and the poor so badly. By the same token, theorists need the infusion of energy that comes from exposure to real-­world problems, both as a galvanizing force for scholarship and as a reality test for their writing. As for criticizing the existing system, the crits respond that they have been at work developing a vision to replace it. As examples, they cite Derrick Bell’s theories of cultural and educational self-­help; Lani Guinier’s efforts to reform electoral democracy; Charles Lawrence’s, Mari Matsuda’s, and Richard Delgado’s work developing a new theory of hate speech; Kimberlé Crenshaw’s development of the idea of intersectional discrimination; Juan Perea’s arguments for linguistic pluralism; and Devon Carbado’s and Mitu Gulati’s analyses of workplace discrimination. A jury found that defendants had engaged in employment discrimination, in part by permitting plaintiffs to be the target of racial epithets repeatedly spoken by a fellow employee. In addition to awarding damages, the trial court issued an injunction prohibiting the offending employee from using such

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epithets in the future. Defendants argue that such an injunction constitutes a prior restraint that violates their constitutional right to freedom of speech. For the reasons that follow, we hold that a remedial injunction prohibiting the continued use of racial epithets in the workplace does not violate the right to freedom of speech if there has been a judicial determination that the use of such epithets will contribute to the continuation of a hostile or abusive work environment and therefore will constitute employment discrimination. Aguilar v. Avis Rent a Car System, Inc., 21 Cal. 4th 121, 126; 980 P.2d 846, 848 (1999)

2. Critique of the Intellectual Heart of the Movement Other questions go to the intellectual heart of critical race theory. A persistent internal critique accuses the movement of straying from its materialist roots and dwelling overly on matters of concern to middle-­class minorities—­ microaggressions, racial insults, unconscious discrimination, and affirmative action in higher education. If racial oppression has material and cultural roots, attacking only its ideational or linguistic expression is apt to do little for the underlying structures of inequality, much less the plight of the deeply poor. Another concern that some critics raise is that the movement has become excessively preoccupied with issues of identity—­the social construction of race, the role of multiracial people, “passing,” and endless refinements of the an-

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tiessentialist thesis. These may pose intriguing intellectual puzzles, the critics concede, but they lie far from the central issues of our age. It seems difficult to imagine W. E. B. Du Bois, if he were alive today, writing a Ph.D. dissertation on passing or on whether a professor should be able to earn tenure on the basis of an article written entirely in the narrative voice. By the same token, it may be that lavish attention to the nuances of intersectional identity and the differences in perspective that separate, say, mixed-­race women of Samoan-­ white parentage and Black-­looking, Spanish-­speaking men from a Caribbean area is less worthy than it was in early years. A furious right-­wing attack on all people of color and the poor has, perhaps, rendered these differences less relevant than they were in former times. In general, the internal critiques go only to the movement’s emphasis and allocation of resources and attention. They do not threaten its solidarity, vitality, or ability to generate vital insights into America’s racial predicament (see chapter 7). A final internal critique raises the question of whether critical race theory takes adequate account of economic democracy. If the emerging issues of the new century are world trade, globalization, workers’ rights, and who shares in the new wealth created by the technology revolution, a movement that has no theory of race and class is apt to seem increasingly irrelevant. The recent series of economic shocks heightens the need for such an inquiry. If racism is largely economic in nature—­a search for profits—­and hypercapitalism is increasingly showing itself as a flawed system, what follows for a theory of civil rights?

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C. CR I T I CA L R ACE T HEO RY A S A M E T H O D O F IN Q U IRY IN NE W F IEL D S A ND C O U N T R IE S

A second set of critiques question whether critical race theory or particular tools of analysis remain helpful when exported to areas outside the setting in which they arose (namely, domestic U.S. racism in its late-­1980s manifestations). Justin Driver, for example, questioned whether Derrick Bell’s interest-­convergence formula (see chapter 2) has any continuing validity in the current era. And a host of scholars in other disciplines or countries, while enthusiastically embracing the new perspectives CRT offers, advocate caution in extending them to new settings, such as the caste system in India or the Roma (“gypsies”) in Europe. By the same token, American crits and their supporters may do well to follow and learn from advances in Europe, Canada, Australia, and Latin America. For example, British scholars in the field of education are developing intriguing analyses of class and maintaining lively exchanges with Marxist scholars, something that has been missing in the American scene, at least to date. Canada, Australia, and a few Latin American countries have been apologizing for historic abuses of indigenous populations and even making amends. CL A S SRO O M E X ERCI SE

The program coordinator for the regional conference on critical race theory seeks your advice on the following question: The conference committee wishes to include a

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two-­hour session, toward the end of the conference, dealing with extremely sensitive internal criticism of the direction the movement has been taking. Should the session be open or closed to the press? Should it be open only to persons who have participated in the movement for at least five years? Should whites be excluded? Should the organizers ask the participants to refrain from recording it? In other words, what should one do about airing “dirty laundry”? Half of your group argues the let-­it-­all-­hang-­out position, while the other argues for a secret session. (See John Calmore, Airing Dirty Laundry: Disputes among Privileged Blacks—­From Clarence Thomas to the Law School Five, 46 How. L.J. 175 [2003].)

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Questions and Comments for Chapter VI 1. Reconsider the question posed at the end of chapter 1: Is critical race theory too pessimistic? 2. Do CRT’s critics make the mistake of holding up the new paradigm of civil rights analysis to the standard of the old one? Is this like deeming Martin Luther a heretic because he sought to change the teachings of the Catholic Church or like judging Jesus by the standards of the Roman Empire? 3. Is it a problem that before a certain point, most of the civil rights literature in law was written by a small circle of white scholars who cited mainly each other and ignored the small, but growing, literature written by scholars of color? Or might it have one or more perfectly logical explanations? 4. Are stories based on firsthand experience—­for example, racial discrimination at a department store—­irrefutable (because only the author was there), and, if so, how can other scholars build on or criticize them? Are they power moves? Exclusionary? Useful raw experience or data? 5. Is it a waste of time for a movement that seeks social justice to focus on internal issues of identity and the relations of subgroups within itself? 6. Is working within the system or outside it the best way to bring about change? Which would you choose, and why? 7. If Group A (say, Jews) is successful and Group B (say, Blacks) is not, and Group B charges that the system is rigged, is that an implied criticism of Group A, because it implies that they took advantage of an unfair system to get ahead? 8. Is the latest wave of anti-­CRT criticism, which includes attempts to forbid teaching it in schools and engaging in book-­banning,

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a “moral panic,” like early waves that targeted Darwinism, socialism, and other progressive ideas? See, e.g., Gillian Frank & Adam Laats, This Critical Race Theory Panic Is a Chip Off the Old Block, How 20th Century Curriculum Controversies Foreshadowed This Summer’s Wave of Legislation, Slate, June 18, 2021, https://slate.com.

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Sug ge st e d R e a di ng s Adler-­Bell, Sam, Behind the Critical Race Theory Crackdown, AAPF Forum, Jan. 13, 2022, www.aapf.org. Colloquy, Responses to Racial Critiques of Legal Academia, 103 Harv. L. Rev. 1844 (1990). Delgado, Richard, The Imperial Scholar: Reflections on a Review of Civil Rights Literature, 132 U. Pa. L. Rev. 561 (1984). Driver, Justin, Rethinking the Interest Convergence Thesis, 105 Nw. U. L. Rev. 149 (2015). Farber, Daniel & Suzanna Sherry, Beyond All Reason: The Radical Assault on Truth in American Law (1997). Kennedy, Randall L., Racial Critiques of Legal Academia, 102 Harv. L. Rev. 1745 (1989). Posner, Richard A., The Skin Trade, New Republic, October 13, 1997, at 40. Rosen, Jeffrey, The Bloods and the Crits, New Republic, December 9, 1996, at 27. Trump, Donald J., Executive Order on Combating Race and Sex Stereotyping, Sept. 22, 2020, https://trumpwhitehouse. archives.gov.

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VII

CRITICAL RACE THEORY TODAY

What is the situation of critical race theory today? In many respects, the movement is thriving. Dynamic subdisciplines such as the Latino-­critical movement, queer-­crit studies, and a fledgling group of Muslims challenge civil rights thinkers to reconsider the ways they conceptualize their discipline. CRT has spread to other departments and countries. Some judges incorporate its ideas into opinions, often without attribution. Lawyers use critical race theory techniques to advocate on behalf of clients and to expose bias within the system. Educators use it to understand problems of school authority and discipline and to improve the teaching of subjects like U.S. history. In this chapter, we discuss some of these developments and the impact that CRT seems to be having on national discourse. We analyze some of the internal struggles that are playing out within the group and examine a few topics, such as class, poverty, the wealth and income gap, crime, campus climate, affirmative action, immigration, and voting rights, that are very much on the country’s front burner. A . R I G H T-­W IN G O F F EN SI V E

The decade of the nineties saw the beginning of a vigorous offensive from the political Right. Abetted by heavy funding 115

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from conservative foundations and a drumbeat of criticism from right-­wing think tanks and media outlets, conservatives advanced a series of policy initiatives, including campaigns against bilingual education, affirmative action, police reform, immigration, and critical race studies in schools and colleges. They also lobbied energetically against hate-­speech regulation, welfare, and governmental measures designed to increase minorities’ political representation in Congress. Some of the backers of these initiatives were former liberals disenchanted with the country’s departure from color-­blind neutrality. Others were nativists concerned about immigration or national security hawks worried about the threat of terrorism. Later, Trump backers disappointed with his loss in 2020 and the country’s direction mounted a furious attack on what they perceived to be liberal teaching in K-­12 schools and higher education. Critical race theorists figured in all those controversies. They also addressed identity issues within critical race theory, intergroup coalitions, and the use of empirical methods in theorizing and confronting discrimination. B . F RO N T-­BU R NER I S SU E S

Though the American economy advanced rapidly during the Reagan and Clinton years, it began sagging with the dot-­ com bust and later the bursting of the housing bubble and collapse of the finance industry during the George W. Bush years. Without training in the emerging fields of technology and global marketing, minority communities began falling further and further behind. But with the economic downturn

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and weak recovery that followed, they fell even further, and the modest recovery that arrived in the early Biden years did little for them. They had few allies in high places. The Democratic Party courted them less assiduously than it had in former times; the labor movement had lost force; and the country lacked the spur of Cold War competition to enforce antidiscrimination norms rigorously. Postracialism and neoliberal politics that sought to split the difference (“triangulate”) between conservative and liberal policies did little to relieve Black misery. Politicians and media ideologues inveighed against the evils of undocumented immigration, heightening suspicion of Latinos, even ones whose families had been here for generations. After 9/11 and the advent of the Tea Party, and later Trump and his supporters, Muslims endured a rain of insults, surveillance, and even physical attacks. Some of Trump’s followers even blamed the Chinese for the coronavirus pandemic, calling it the “Asian flu.” In such an atmosphere, many critical thinkers put their minds to the task of combating what they saw as the country’s long slide into racial indifference and hostility.

1. Race, Class, Welfare, and Poverty A field on which ideological battles rage is the distribution of material benefits in society. This controversy shades off into the much-­debated question of whether race or class is the dominant factor in the subjugation of people of color. Is racism a means by which whites secure material advantages, as Derrick Bell proposed? Or is a “culture of poverty,” including broken

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families, crime, intermittent employment, and a high educational dropout rate, what causes minorities to lag behind? Critical race theory is only now beginning to develop a comprehensive theory of class. A few scholars (“class-­crits”) address issues such as housing segregation in terms of both race and class, showing that Black poverty is different from almost any other kind. Real estate steering, redlining, and denial of loans and mortgages, especially after the end of World War II, prevented Black people from owning homes, especially in desirable neighborhoods. These practices excluded Black people from sharing in the appreciation in real estate property values that some eras have witnessed. Confinement to certain neighborhoods, in turn, limits where Black and Latino parents could send their children to school, thus perpetuating a cycle of exclusion from opportunities for upward mobility that have enabled many poor whites to rise. Some race crits focus on discrimination in higher-­echelon jobs and in such fields as the delivery of health services. The critique of standardized testing also contains a class element: critics of tests such as the SAT have shown that many of the questions have been class bound, requiring familiarity with such items as polo mallets or regattas, and that the best predictor of a person’s SAT score is his or her father’s occupation; another is the test-­takers’ zip code. Even though the Educational Testing Service strives to detect and eliminate the most egregious examples, bias remains. Other critical race theorists ponder the distribution of environmental dangers and biohazards. The environmental justice movement analyzes a type of internal colonialism,

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in which installations such as toxic-­waste sites, radioactive tailings, and sewage-­treatment plants are disproportionately placed in or near minority communities or on Indian reservations. Inadequate or poisoned water systems seem almost always to sicken the occupants of cities like Flint, Michigan, or towns in rural Appalachia, not Beverly Hills or Scarsdale. Corporate defenders of these practices argue, as they do in the international arena, that they are merely going to the best market. Sometimes they point out that minority communities welcome the jobs that a sewage-­treatment plant, for example, would bring. Civil rights activists reply that the marketplace is far from neutral and that a corporation that takes advantage of a community’s financial vulnerability is engaging in predatory behavior, if not outright racism. They note that global warming is producing flooding in impoverished native villages in Alaska, small islands in the far Pacific, and the mountains of Peru. A dynamic example of critical race theory in action, the environmental justice movement aims at forging a coalition between the hitherto white-­dominated conservation movement and minority communities. If it succeeds, it will have created a truly powerful force for change. I concur in Chief Judge Wilkinson’s well-­reasoned opinion of the court. I write separately, however, to memorialize my serious concern with the shabby treatment the African-­ American residents of Jersey Heights have suffered at the hands of state and federal highway planners and officials. It is no historical accident that Jersey Heights today is ninety-­nine percent African-­American. Displaced from their

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downtown neighborhoods by the construction of Route 13 in the 1930s and the original Route 50 in the 1950s, African Americans in Salisbury relocated to Jersey Heights. As a result of widespread steering practices, Jersey Heights was the only area in which Salisbury’s African Americans could find available housing. According to one plaintiff, Salisbury has had an “unwritten law”—­that “if you were a certain pigmentation you had to live west of this [Wicomico River] bridge.” . . . Although the term “environmental justice” is of fairly recent vintage, the concept is not. See Michele L. Knorr, Environmental Injustice, 6 U. Balt. J. Envtl. L. 71, 73–­76 (1997). As Ms. Knorr aptly states, “environmental health hazards are unequally distributed in the United States. Millions of people in minority and low-­income communities are subjected to greater levels of pollution than Caucasian and wealthy populations because of their race or socioeconomic status. Environmental injustice occurs, in part, because of the exclusion of these communities in the decision-­making process as well as the disproportionate location of pollution.” Knorr, Environmental Injustice, U. Balt. J. Envtl. L. at 71–­72 (footnotes omitted). As Justice Douglas pointed out nearly thirty years ago, “as often happens with interstate highways, the route selected was through the poor area of town, not through the area where the politically powerful people live.” Jersey Heights Neighborhood Ass’n v. Glendening, 174 F.3d 180, 186 n.1 (4th Cir. 1999)

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How should critical observers see the increasing disparity between the household incomes and assets of the top 10 percent of our society and all the rest? Formerly, the United States relied on redistributive measures such as a progressive income tax, public education, and a welfare safety net to prevent people at the bottom from slipping into permanent poverty. Today, those programs command much less support than they once did. Some writers believe that the reason is that the public sees the recipients of welfare as having Black and brown faces—­even though more whites receive welfare than do people of color. In short, society tolerates poverty and blighted prospects for outsider groups. Many critical race scholars recognize that poverty and race intersect in complex ways, so that the predicament of very poor minority families differs in degree from that of their white counterparts. White poverty—­except, perhaps, for the rural kind—­usually lasts only for a generation or two, even for white immigrant families. Not so for Black or brown poverty—­it is apt to last forever. By the same token, middle-­class or professional status for Blacks, browns, or American Indians is less secure than for others. Their children can fall from grace with breathtaking speed; sometimes all it takes is one arrest or a few very low grades in school. But a general theory of race and economics remains elusive, at least for now. Interest in the topic is rising, however, especially among a new generation of young adults just now reaching college or law school. In the meantime, a few legal scholars have been pointing out how universal programs such as the G.I. Bill, federal

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housing supports, or even Social Security end up widening the gap between whites and Blacks. The programs fall on already-­plowed ground. Whites are more able to take advantage of them than are people of color. Sometimes the programs contain hidden preferences and assumptions that enable whites to benefit more from them than others can. The same is likely to happen if society retires affirmative action based on race for a version based on socioeconomic disadvantage, as many writers have suggested. This approach is popular with defenders of the color-­blind approach—­ scholars and commentators who wish that society would stop thinking in terms of race but instead renew focus on efficiency, class, merit, and other means of ordering society.

2. Policing and Criminal Justice Another set of contemporary issues has to do with addressing racism in the criminal justice system. On any given day, about 60 percent of the Black men in the District of Columbia are enmeshed in that system—­in jail or prison, on probation or parole, or wanted on a warrant. In East Los Angeles, half of young Mexican American men suffer the same fate. Black men who murder whites are executed at a rate nearly ten times that of whites who murder Blacks. And as most readers of this book will know, the number of young Black men in prison or jail is larger than the number attending college. Many progressive people seek to understand the meaning of these figures and search for ways to combat the condi-

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tions that create them. Critical race theory’s contribution has taken a number of forms. Building on the work of radical criminologists, one race crit shows that the disproportionate criminalization of African Americans is a product, in large part, of the way we define crime. Many lethal acts, such as marketing defective automobiles, alcohol, or pharmaceuticals, or waging undeclared wars, are not considered crimes at all. By the same token, many things that young Black and Latino men are prone to do, such as congregating on street corners, cruising in lowriders, or scrawling graffiti in public places, are energetically policed, sometimes under new ordinances that penalize belonging to a gang or associating with a known gang member. Crack-­cocaine offenses still receive harsher penalties than those for powder. Figures show that white-­collar crime, including embezzlement, consumer fraud, bribery, insider trading, and price fixing, causes more deaths and property loss, even on a per capita basis, than does all street crime combined. Other CRT scholars address racial profiling, in which the police stop minority-­looking motorists or pedestrians to search for drugs or other contraband, and “statistical discrimination” carried out by ordinary people who avoid Blacks or Latinos because they believe they are more likely than whites to be perpetrators of crime or members of vicious gangs. Both practices penalize law-­abiding people of color and alienate the young. Some cities have even enacted antigang ordinances that penalize young people for associating with a gang member, for committing lifestyle offenses, or even for wearing a shirt of the wrong color,

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The 48 declarations submitted by the City in support of its plea for injunctive relief paint a graphic portrait of life . . . in an urban war zone. The four-­square-­block neighborhood, claimed as the turf of a gang variously known as Varrio Sureño Town, Varrio Sureño Treces (VST), or Varrio Sureño Locos (VSL) is an occupied territory. Gang members . . . congregate on lawns, on sidewalks, and in front of apartment complexes at all hours of the day and night. They display a casual contempt for notions of law, order, and decency—­ openly drinking, smoking dope, sniffing toluene, and even snorting cocaine laid out in neat lines on the hoods of residents’ cars. The people who live in Rocksprings are subjected to loud talk, loud music, vulgarity, profanity, brutality, fistfights and the sound of gunfire echoing in the streets.  .  .  . Area residents have had their garages used as urinals; their homes commandeered as escape routes; their walls, fences, garage doors, sidewalks, and even their vehicles turned into a sullen canvas of gang graffiti. . . . The people of this community are prisoners in their own homes. People ex rel. Joan R. Gallo v. Acuna, 14 Cal. 4th 1090, 929 P.2d 596, 601 (1997) (upholding an injunction against members of an alleged “criminal street gang” under which the youths—­ all or most of whom were Latinos—­would be forbidden from gathering with each other or their friends in a public place)

Other critical race scholars urge jury nullification to combat the disproportionate incarceration of young Black men.

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In this practice, the jury—­which in most large cities will contain at least some people of color—­uses its judgment, sometimes ignoring instructions from the judge on whether to convict a defendant who has committed a nonviolent offense, such as shoplifting or possession of a small amount of drugs. If the jury believes that the police system is racist or that the young man is of more use to the community free than behind bars, it will vote to acquit. (See also discussion of antisnitching campaigns in chapter 4.) One federal judge, versed in critical race theory, applied a similar analysis in the case of a Black defendant. Under a three-­strikes-­and-­you’re-­out type of law, the judge was required to sentence the man to a long term. On noticing that the man’s two previous offenses had been connected to automobiles, the judge declined to do so. Reasoning that racial profiling by the police causes Black motorists to be pulled over more frequently than whites, she concluded that the defendant’s two prior convictions had likely been tainted by racism. Consequently, she sentenced him to the shorter term appropriate for nonrepeat offenders. The scholarly and popular literature strongly suggest  .  .  . racial disparity in the rates at which African Americans are stopped and prosecuted for traffic offenses. That literature, together with the specific facts about Leviner’s record and background, compel me to depart from the Guidelines range. . . . While the Sentencing Guidelines were designed to eliminate unwarranted disparities in sentencing, and constrain a

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judge’s discretion, they are not to be applied mechanistically, wholly ignoring fairness, logic, and the underlying statutory scheme. . . . Motor vehicle offenses, in particular, raise deep concerns about racial disparity. Studies from a number of scholars, and articles in the popular literature have focused on the fact that African American motorists are stopped and prosecuted for traffic stops, more than any other citizens. And if that is so, then it is not unreasonable to believe that African Americans would also be imprisoned at a higher rate for these offenses as well. Judge Nancy Gertner in United States of America v. Leviner, 31 F. Supp. 2d 23, 24, 25, 33 (D. Mass. 1998)

Still others examine the recent wave of prison building, including the outsourcing of incarceration to private entrepreneurs. They analyze who profits from this social trend. They also question why sentences in the United States are so long—­among the longest in the world—­and punitive in orientation rather than rehabilitative. A Prison-­to-­College Pipeline study, initiated by the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, seeks to help inmates acquire skills that will enable them to make a successful reentry to postprison life. States are beginning to heed these suggestions, in part out of interest convergence. In many states, the prisons are so crammed full that judges have ordered early release for some inmates. A few states pay so much to operate their prison

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system—­an amount nearly equal to what they spend on public education—­that their budgets are under severe strain. One scholar, Paul Butler, proposes that the values of hip-­ hop music and culture could serve as a basis for reconstructing the criminal justice system so that it is more humane and responsive to the concerns of the Black community. That program of reconstruction needs to start soon. Police shootings and killings of unarmed Black men have risen so rapidly that even a leading medical journal recognizes them as growing health concerns. Civil rights scholars, crits, and community activists have been demanding changes in police training and culture and civilian review boards. A vigorous Black Lives Matter movement has been pressing for change. Many campus activists have taken up the cause as well, sometimes working in tandem with the Defund the Police movement. Imprisonment for a felony often leads to disenfranchisement under state laws that deprive felons of the right to vote, even after serving their time. We take up the question of voting rights in a subsequent section.

3. Hate Speech, Language Rights, and School Curricula Additional issues have to do with speech and language. One of the first critical race theory proposals had to do with hate speech—­the rain of insults, epithets, and name-­calling that many minority people face on a daily basis. An early article documented some of the harms that this type of speech can inflict. It pointed out that courts were already affording

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intermittent relief for victims of hate speech under such doctrines as defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and assault and battery and concluded by urging a new independent tort in which the victims of deliberate, face-­to-­face vituperation could sue and prove damages. Later articles and books built on this idea. One writer suggested criminalization as an answer; others urged that colleges and universities adopt student conduct rules designed to deter hate speech on campus. Still others connected hate speech to the social-­construction-­of-­race hypothesis, pointing out that concerted racial vilification contributes to social images and ingrained preconceptions of people of color as indolent, immoral, or intellectually deficient. Although occasional plaintiffs have gained relief through the tort avenue, U.S. courts have treated campus hate-­speech codes harshly, striking down at least four as violations of the First Amendment. Elsewhere, however, the Supreme Court of Canada upheld that country’s criminal-­hate-­speech provision, citing U.S. critical race theorists’ work, while many European and British Commonwealth countries have instituted controls similar to Canada’s. On the premise that “legal realism” will soon reach First Amendment jurisprudence, sweeping aside mechanical rules and barriers (“no recovery for mere offense”) in favor of a broader, more policy-­sensitive approach, critical race theorists have been tackling some of the most common policy objections to hate-­speech regulation, including that more speech is the best remedy for bad speech, that hate speech serves as a pressure valve relieving tension that might ex-

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plode in an even more harmful manner later, and that a focus on speech fails to get at the “real problem.” In the meantime, American courts, seemingly influenced by critical race theory writing, have been upholding causes of action brought by minority victims of hate speech under such legal theories as hostile environment. In 1972, plaintiff Carrie Taylor began working as a sheriff ’s officer in the office of the Burlington County Sheriff. On January 31, 1992, Taylor, who is African American, was at the Burlington County Police Academy for firearms training. .  .  . While there, she encountered defendant Henry Metzger and Undersheriff Gerald Isham. Taylor said hello, and, in response, Metzger turned to Isham and stated: “There’s the jungle bunny.” Isham laughed. Plaintiff believed the remark to be a demeaning and derogatory racial slur, but she did not reply. She became a “nervous wreck,” immediately began crying, and went to the bathroom. In this case, defendant’s remark had an unambiguously demeaning racial message that a rational factfinder could conclude was sufficiently severe to contribute materially to the creation of a hostile work environment. The term  .  .  . “jungle bunny” is patently a racist slur, and is ugly, stark and raw in its opprobrious connotation. . . . See Mari Matsuda, Public Response to Racist Speech, 87 Mich. L. Rev. 2330, 2338 (1989) (“However irrational racist speech may be, it hits right at the emotional place where we feel the most pain.”). Taylor v. Metzger, 706 A.2d 685, 691 (N.J. 1998)

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As this edition went to press, students on several dozen campuses were demonstrating for safe spaces and protection from racially hostile climates with daily insults, epithets, slurs, and displays of Confederate symbols and flags. Some campuses are reevaluating the possibility of rules and policies aimed at protecting equal educational opportunity. These campus climate issues are prompting serious reconsideration among university administrators—­and for good reason. With affirmative action under sharp attack, universities need to assure that their campuses are as welcoming as possible. At the same time, a new generation of undergraduates seems to be demonstrating a renewed willingness to confront illegitimate authority. Hate speech on the internet is posing a difficult problem. Blogs, tweets, cartoons (for example, of a disliked figure, such as the Prophet Muhammad), and other messages in this medium are inexpensive and easy to circulate, often anonymously. They enable those who dislike a person or race to find others of like mind, so that reinforcement builds, often unopposed. Society polarizes, with groups distrusting each other and believing the other side wrongheaded. Of course, counterspeech is easy and inexpensive on the internet. Still, the ready availability of an avenue for replying to a vituperative message has not completely solved the problem. A second speech-­related issue concerns the rights of non-­ English speakers to use their native languages in the workplace, voting booth, schoolhouse, and government offices. This issue, of great concern to Asian and Latino populations, squarely confronts a growing tide of nativist sentiment that

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also includes immigration controls and restrictions on the provision of government services to noncitizens. Crits point out that language is an essential part of culture and identity, that having a French or British accent is deemed a mark of refinement, not a sign of deficiency, and that many foreign countries are happily multilingual and not at all balkanized. Although over half of American states have enacted English-­ only measures during this century, the tide may be turning: the Arizona Supreme Court recently declared unconstitutional that state’s harshly enforced official-­English statute as a violation of the First Amendment. At the outset, we note that this case concerns the tension between the constitutional status of language rights and the state’s power to restrict such rights. On the one hand, in our diverse society, the importance of establishing common bonds and a common language between citizens is clear. . . . We recognize that the acquisition of English language skills is important in our society. . . . However, the American tradition of tolerance “recognizes a critical difference between encouraging the use of English and repressing the use of other languages.” . . . If the wide-­ranging language of the prohibitions contained in the Amendment were to be implemented as written, the First Amendment rights of [non-­English speakers] would be violated. Arizona Supreme Court, in striking down that state’s English-­only amendment, in Ruiz v. Hull, 957 P.2d 984, 990, 991 (Ariz. 1998)

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In 2006, Arizona voters passed a new English-­only law designed to meet the court’s objections. Arizona, of course, has been the site of considerable anti-­ immigrant ferment. With a large Spanish-­speaking population and a long border with Mexico, the state recently enacted one of the country’s most overtly anti-­immigrant laws. A 2010 statute empowered local police to request documentation of immigration status from persons with whom they come into contact and suspect may be undocumented. The state boasted, as well, a large and shifting contingent of unofficial border vigilantes who professed to assist law enforcement in reporting and arresting unofficial entrants. Many carried out their functions with a zeal that suggested that their main motivation is dislike of the foreign-­born, even law-­abiding individuals merely looking for honest work. The state overplayed its hand: the bill was so heavy-­handed that the supreme court struck down most of it. Not deterred, the Arizona legislature enacted a second bill eliminating courses of Mexican American Studies (MAS) in schools like those in Tucson. The program had been popular and so successful that over 90 percent of its students graduated, many going on to college. The anti-­MAS statute was struck down after a long course of litigation (see chapter 4).

4. Affirmative Action and Color Blindness When Martin Luther King, Jr., issued his famous call for America to put aside its racist past and judge people not by the color of their skin but by the content of their character, he

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was echoing a demand with long roots in America’s history. More than half a century earlier, in Plessy v. Ferguson, Justice John Harlan in a famous dissent had protested the majority’s formalistic separate-­but-­equal decision. In Plessy, a Black man had challenged a railroad’s rule prohibiting him from riding in a car reserved for whites. The railroad replied that it had set aside identical cars for Black passengers and therefore its practice did not violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The United States Supreme Court agreed with the railroad, establishing the principle of separate-­but-­equal that lasted until the Brown v. Board of Education decision of 1954. Justice Harlan’s scathing dissent rebuked the majority’s decision. He pointed out that history and custom rendered preposterous the blithe denial that anything impermissible had happened. The railroad’s separation of the races occurred against a background that made its symbolism and insult unmistakable. With Brown, the judicial system moved away from its earlier (Plessy) interpretation of equality, adopting Justice Harlan’s position. The new approach, which looked not merely to whether a law or practice mentioned race but to its real-­world effects, lasted through the sixties and seventies. During this time, the nation adopted affirmative action, which arrived with President Lyndon Johnson’s Executive Order 11246 in 1965. Soon a host of federal and state agencies, including schools and universities, followed suit. By the midseventies, affirmative action had become so unpopular in certain circles that Allan Bakke, who had been denied admission to the University of California at Davis

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Medical School, sued to declare race-­conscious admissions in higher education unconstitutional. The Supreme Court’s splintered decision narrowed affirmative action by insisting that universities set aside no formal quota for minorities and that they compare every candidate with every other. If universities were careful to observe these limitations, they could consider race as one factor among many in order to achieve a diverse intellectual environment. Although subsequent decisions cast doubt on this so-­called diversity rationale, a Supreme Court decision from Michigan, Grutter v. Bollinger, reaffirmed Bakke’s essential lesson. Public universities, if they see fit, may operate narrow affirmative action programs aimed at creating a diverse intellectual climate. Conservatives, however, have not abandoned the struggle. Beginning with position papers, op-­ed columns, and books, writers of this persuasion have been arguing that affirmative action balkanizes the country, stigmatizes minorities, violates the merit principle, and constitutes reverse discrimination. Some, such as the authors of The Bell Curve, have even argued that minorities may be biologically inferior to whites, so that their smaller numbers in selective schools and occupations should come as no surprise. Conservatives followed up their media campaign with a series of public referenda and initiatives aimed at declaring affirmative action illegal in particular states. Civil rights organizations and progressive educators have sought to counter each of these efforts. Progressive scientists challenged the premises of The Bell Curve and similar neoeugenicist tracts, showing how they rest on discredited science.

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Critical race theorists have launched a thoroughgoing attack on the idea of conventional merit and standardized testing. Conservatives make points by charging that affirmative action gives jobs or places in academic programs to individuals who do not deserve them. The public supposedly receives incompetent service, while better-­qualified workers or students are shunted aside. This argument has resonated with certain liberals who equate fairness with color blindness and equal opportunity, rather than equal results (see chapter 2). CRT’s critique of merit takes a number of forms, all designed to show that the notion is far from the neutral standard that its supporters imagine. Writers point out that tests like the SAT or its law-­school version, the LSAT, are coachable and reward people from high socioeconomic levels who can afford to pay for expensive test-­prep courses (see chapter 6). LSAT scores predict little more than first-­year grades—­a nd those only modestly—­a nd do not measure other important qualities such as empathy, achievement orientation, or communication skills. These writers point out that merit is highly situational. If one moves the hoop in a basketball court up or down six inches, one radically changes the distribution of who has merit. Similarly, if one defines the objective of a law school as turning out glib lawyers who excel at a certain type of verbal reasoning, then one group would appear to have a virtual corner on merit. But if one defines lawyering skills more broadly to include negotiation, interpersonal understanding, and the ability to craft an original argument for law reform, then a different group might well emerge.

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A UCLA educator, Richard Sander, advanced a different critique. He argues that affirmative action in law schools merely places Black people in settings where they are in over their heads and fail at high rates. Without the lift of the unseen hand, minorities would attend schools further down the pecking order and be happier and more successful. Defenders counter that minority graduates of top schools who were admitted under affirmative action programs are, on the whole, well-­adjusted and successful in school and in later life. These schools have more resources, alumni networks, and smaller classes than ones further down the line, so that students of color who enroll there generally have good experiences and go on to contribute significantly to society. Some current critics urge abolishing race-­based affirmative action in favor of a version based on family income or economic class. Such a program, they say, would help all kids who grew up poor, not just minorities. It would also resonate with the current vogue of color-­blind remedies and approaches to race and racism. Defenders point out, though, that such a shift would devastate the chances of communities of color, because the number of poor whites greatly exceeds that of poor minorities. One scholar proposed that any institution tempted to implement an affirmative action plan of this type also take into account advantage, or white privilege (see chapter 5). For example, imagine a university admissions committee comparing two candidates. Candidate A is a Chicano from East Los Angeles with a 3.9 grade point average from an inner-­city school and an SAT score of 1050. His college essay recounts

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that he stepped in when his father went to jail and helped raise his younger siblings. His life objective is to apply César Chávez’s religion-­based, collectivist ideas to organize urban neighborhoods. Candidate B is a son of a white suburban family who sent him to a private school and to Europe during his junior year. This student has a 3.3 grade point average from an elite school and an SAT score of 1200. He has no particular educational objective but wants to develop an all-­a round grounding in liberal arts before going to work in his dad’s company. His personal essay describes how his effort to make the junior-­varsity cross-­country team strengthened his character. Most admissions officers, like most readers of this book, would probably favor the Chicano candidate despite his lower test scores, but why? Perhaps it is because we believe that Candidate B has not made the most of his opportunities, while Candidate A seems eager to do so. The author who developed this proposal drew on notions of white privilege to urge that admissions officers discount, or penalize, the scores of candidates like B, thus clearing a way for ones like A. This measure would reduce the number of lackadaisical admits, clearing the way for even larger numbers of students of all races who have suffered real disadvantage and are eager to further their education. Mainstream organizations, including the American Bar Association, and a few selective colleges and universities have been considering deemphasizing standardized tests, including the SAT and the LSAT, on the grounds that they

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imperfectly predict occupational or professional success and discriminate against minorities. In order to cultivate a set of leaders with legitimacy in the eyes of the citizenry, it is necessary that the path to leadership be visibly open to talented and qualified individuals of every race and ethnicity. All members of our heterogeneous society must have confidence in the openness and integrity of the educational institutions that provide this training.  .  .  . Access to legal education (and thus the legal professions) must be inclusive of talented and qualified individuals of every race and ethnicity, so that all members of our heterogeneous society may participate in the educational institutions that provide the training and education necessary to succeed in America. Grutter v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. 306, 332–­33 (2003)

5. Globalization and Immigration A fifth issue that is very much at the forefront of critical race theory is international globalization. A globalizing economy removes manufacturing jobs from inner cities (often to other countries), creates technology and information industry jobs for which many minorities have little training, and concentrates capital in the pockets of an elite class, which seems little inclined to share it. A globalizing economy often includes free-­trade agreements, like the United States–­ Mexico–­Canada Agreement (USMCA, formerly NAFTA),

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which can decimate the economies of a weaker nation such as Mexico. At the same time, however, globalization offers opportunities for minorities to form coalitions with American blue-­collar workers and unions that face loss of jobs and a weakening wage structure. Some crits believe that the situations of domestic minorities and peer workers in Third World countries are linked and must be addressed together and that hypercapitalism is doomed to produce periodic crises and financial downturns during which minority fortunes, like those of the working poor, suffer. The development of maquiladoras on the Mexican side of the U.S. border brings many of these problems into high relief. History suggests that the scholars who call attention to these global developments may be right. Sweatshop and other exploitive conditions in overseas factories generally afflict poor, formerly colonized people of color, many of them women. Decontextualized free-­market ideology would hold that American corporations are merely offering these workers the going wage or slightly better. Critics point out that the reason these wages are low and the newly created jobs unattractive is that U.S. and European colonialism has robbed colonies of their natural wealth, suppressed the development of local leaders, and conspired with right-­w ing dictators to keep the people poor and disorganized. Indigenous leaders such as Rigoberta Menchú and Subcomandante Marcos have led resistance movements in many Latin American countries, calling attention to the need for economic democracy and land reform. American corporations often oppose these changes. Many Latino-­critical scholars

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and even Pope Francis have taken stands in support of the indigenous movements. If the materialist wing of critical race theory is right, domestic minorities have suffered at the hands of very similar forces. Indeed, their fates are linked with those of their overseas counterparts, since capitalists can always use the threat that industrial operations will relocate overseas to defeat unions, workplace regulations, welfare, and other programs of interest to U.S. minorities. Accordingly, some crits have begun reading or rereading the body of literature known as postcolonial studies in an effort to understand how their movement might dovetail with these others. Another prominent area for critical race analysis is immigration law. The United States tolerates and, in some cases, abets repressive murderous regimes abroad, often in small countries whose wealth it and other colonial powers have already plundered. People from these countries, unsurprisingly, often want to immigrate to the United States or to the prosperous industrialized countries of northern Europe. Although the United States dropped its racist national-­origin quota system in 1965, it still limits immigration and polices the southern border with Mexico zealously. Judicial review of immigration policy is sharply limited because of the plenary power doctrine, under which courts grant Congress virtually unlimited power to regulate immigration. Thus, treatment of countries or groups of would-­be immigrants that would constitute clear-­cut equal protection or due process problems cannot be challenged in court. The resulting harsh treatment

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of people fleeing poverty, gangs, death squads, or repression in their home countries offers what one critical race theorist has called a “magic mirror” into the heart of America. This mirror shows how American society really thinks of its own citizens of color and would treat them if it were not for the courts. As we write, civil rights scholars have been challenging racial profiling of Latino-­looking immigrants, local ordinances aimed at immigrants, lawless border vigilantes, threats to abolish DACA, and the privatization of immigration detention. They have been asking who benefits from increased immigration enforcement and prison-­building. They have also been questioning whether the high degree of suspicion and surveillance that the national intelligence establishment devotes to Middle Eastern–­looking people and Muslims is merited or even makes sense in law enforcement terms. It alienates the very community whose cooperation the authorities need in keeping tabs on threats to national security. It allows real terrorist groups in the Middle East to make propaganda capital at our expense. And it recalls unsavory chapters in U.S. history such as the World War II–­era internment of an entire domestic minority merely on the basis of the suspicion that a few might be harboring unpatriotic thoughts and plans. (See the coram nobis petition rewriting the history of Japanese American World War II internment in chapter 5.) One recent scholar notes the way presidential rhetoric in the War on Terror echoes old themes from the days of Indian frontier wars.

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6. Voting Rights As mentioned, aggressive policing and incarceration result in large numbers of civilians who are ex-­convicts and unable to vote. But in addition to “felon disenfranchisement,” communities of color suffer another kind simply by reason of their numerical minority status. In most elections, except for those of mayors of certain large cities, people of color will be in the minority. Even if they vote as a bloc, if whites vote that way as well, minorities are apt to find themselves outvoted. The Supreme Court has recently approved voting measures—­including redistricting and gerrymandering—­ that have a disproportionate effect on minority voting. Until the country’s demographic makeup shifts even more decisively, efforts must continue to counter minority underrepresentation. Cumulative voting, proposed by a leading critical race theorist, would circumvent some of these problems by allowing voters facing a slate of ten candidates, for example, to place all ten of their votes on one, so that if one of the candidates is, say, an African American whose record and positions are attractive to that community, that candidate should be able to win election. The same author has provided a number of suggestions aimed at ameliorating the predicament of the lone Black or brown legislator who is constantly outvoted in the halls of power or is required to engage in exchanges of votes or favors to register an infrequent victory. Adding to earlier cutbacks in the protection of minorities in voting (Shelby County v. Holder), all these matters take on increased urgency. Since 2013, southern officials no longer

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need to secure federal “preclearance” when they change voting rules. Many have seized on this opportunity to require photo identification, relocate registration offices to distant locales, and limit voting hours in ways that are likely to fall heavily on minority voters. In the wake of Biden’s victory over Trump in 2020, these measures have only increased. C. ID EN T I T Y

As mentioned earlier (see chapter 2), a great divide separates two broad types of current critical race scholarship. One (the materialist or “real world” school) writes about issues such as globalization, immigration, nativism, the wealth divide, race and class, housing, policing, and the criminal justice system. In broad agreement with Derrick Bell’s view of race as expressing material interests of elite groups, members of this persuasion set out either to understand, analyze, criticize, or change conditions that afflict communities of color in their effort to secure better, more prosperous lives. Discourse analysts, by contrast, focus on ideas and categories by which our society constructs and understands race and racism. Writers in this camp are apt to emphasize issues, such as identity and intersectionality, that center on categorical thinking. They are likely to examine the role of ideas, thoughts, feelings, unconscious discrimination, stereotype threat, and implicit associations and their implications for judicial reasoning. The lines are not rigid; some writers ponder, for example, both hate speech and the social construction of race, or unconscious discrimination and the

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overt, in-­your-­face kind. For example, the second group of scholars has conducted a lively round of discussions dealing with relations inside critical race theory itself, questioning, for example, whether the “essential” LatCrit is a deeply religious Catholic. If so, how does that affect gay or lesbian Latinos/as whose lifestyle has been firmly marginalized by that church? Others analyze the internal makeup of the Latino group, many of whom have an indigenous heritage as well as a European one. Should they designate themselves as “Indian” on U.S. Census forms? Should they check the “other race” box and, in the space following it, write in the word “mestizo”? We have already mentioned the controversy over whether American racial thought incorporates a black-­ white binary. If so, does attachment to that binary marginalize Asians, Latinos, and American Indians? Is it, in short, a power move? Do all people of color share something in common—­namely, their oppression—­or can we only speak of oppressions plural? Meanwhile, some crits in the materialist group are growing impatient with the discourse analysts, urging that the country’s racial predicament is becoming so acute that devoting energy to how a few highly placed academics relate to each other or the terms in which they speak is akin to Nero’s fiddling while Rome burns. The discourse analysts, for their part, point out that many of the chains that bind us are mental and that we will never be free until we throw off ancient restrictions and demeaning patterns of thought and speech and create the discourse to talk about necessary new concepts, including liberation.

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Despite occasional disagreements and differences of emphasis, critical race theory remains a dynamic force on the American legal and cultural scene. The formation of spin-­off groups, far from impairing the group’s effectiveness or muting its voice, has only added new, vital dimensions to the movement as a whole. CL A S SRO O M E X ERCI SE : PA NEL O N T HE IN T ER SEC T I O N O F R ACE A ND B O DY IM AG E

This time you are the program coordinator for the regional student conference on critical race theory. You have just received a letter from a group at one of the area’s schools that wishes to have a panel on eating disorders and body image. They point out that eating disorders and body-­image distortions are a major source of unhappiness among people of color, both young and old, and that the pressure to conform to Eurocentric standards of beauty and physical appearance makes these problems especially acute for minority women, many of whom have little chance of meeting them (see chapter 5). You are concerned that the press, which is sure to cover your conference, will have a field day with the fatness panel if you allow it to go on. The class or study group is your program committee. Elicit the pros and cons of the proposal and decide how to deal with it.

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D. CR I T I CA L EM PIR I CA L A N A LY SI S

In recent years, psychologists and other social scientists have been developing new tools to understand racial oppression and its effects. On the basis of work by Claude Steele, Joshua Aronson, and others, empiricists have analyzed how stereotype threat impairs the ability of minority test-­takers to do their best work and how to combat it. To this point, courts have been slow to apply the teachings of this new form of knowledge, even though it would seem to promise insight into the reasons for the minority-­white test gap. Due to the sparseness of the evidence . . . the court is unable to determine whether stereotype threat explains any part of the gap between Caucasian and underrepresented minority LSAT scores. . . . Professor Steele does not quantify the effect of stereotype threat; nor, at least according to this report, has he performed any research on the LSAT. If there is evidence showing that stereotype threat accounts for some of the LSAT gap, it was not produced in this case. The . . . argument . . . assumes all members of the underrepresented minority groups have suffered adversity entitling them to some degree of upward adjustment in their UGPA and LSAT scores. . . . Every law school applicant is an individual whose personal history is unique. . . . [T]he court is unable to determine whether stereotype threat explains any part of the gap between Caucasian and underrepresented minority LSAT scores. Grutter v. Bollinger, 137 F. Supp. 821 (E.D. Mich. 2002)

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Other social psychologists study implicit associations, the near-­automatic connections that almost every person who grows up in American society draws between race and personal qualities, such as cleanliness, attractiveness, goodness, and a tendency to obey the law. Many Americans have taken the implicit association test, which is online, and learned that they harbor negative attitudes toward minorities, foreigners, or women. Unlike stereotype threat, implicit association research has been slowly making inroads into the thinking of lawyers and judges. Testimony that educates a jury on the concepts of implicit bias and stereotypes is relevant to the issue of whether an employer intentionally discriminated against an employee. . . . Rule 702 simply requires that: (1) the expert be qualified; (2) the testimony address a subject matter on which the factfinder can be assisted by an expert; (3) the testimony be reliable; and (4) the testimony “fit” the facts of the case. . . . All of these factors are satisfied here. Dr. Greenwald is qualified. His opinions are based on reliable methodologies and consist of relevant subject matter. Finally, Dr. Greenwald’s testimony is likely to provide the jury with information that it will be able to use to draw its own conclusions. Therefore, the Court finds that, provided sufficient foundation is laid at trial, Dr. Greenwald’s expert testimony is helpful enough to survive the admissibility threshold. Samaha v. Wash. St. Dept. of Tran., U.S. Dist. Ct., E.D., Wash., Jan. 3, 2012, WL 11091843 at 4.

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Still others have been applying social-­dominance theory and the work of Jim Sidanius (see Jim Sidanius, Social Dominance: An Intergroup Theory of Social Hierarchy and Oppression [1999]) and his colleagues in an effort to understand why humans seem to exhibit a drive to control and dominate their fellow citizens. And a few build on the work of Charles Pierce and Peggy Davis to theorize how microaggressions construct a world in which minorities and women are constantly on the defensive. A handful of court opinions dealing with workplace discrimination find that a constant rain of small insults on the job amounts to redressable discrimination.

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Questions and Comments for Chapter VII 1. Now that you have come this far, revisit the issue with which chapter 2 began: Would a determined campaign by every white person in this country to be color blind—­to completely ignore the race of other people—­eliminate the scourge of racism and racial subordination? Or is racism so embedded in our social structures, rules, laws, language, and ways of doing things that the system of white-­over-­Black/brown/yellow subordination would continue, as though on autopilot? Is racial subordination so profitable and familiar that society is unlikely ever to give it up? 2. A majority of people of color support affirmative action; a majority of whites oppose it. Why is that? 3. Does affirmative action reward incompetence? If so, why has the country’s productivity not slipped during the decades that the program has been in effect? And why do most large corporations favor it? 4. Why should a light-­skinned son of a Black neurosurgeon with an SAT score of 1080 get the nod over the daughter of a Ukrainian immigrant who works in a furniture factory, had to learn English from scratch, and earned a score of 1270? 5. If the police stop Black male motorists 50 percent of the time and whites only 10 percent of the time and justify those stops by pointing out that Black males commit more crime than whites, is that fair? 6. If a white police officer sees two young Black or Latino males walking down the sidewalk with no obvious destination or reason for being there, is it okay for the officer to ask them where they are going? Is it insulting and disrespectful, even if the officer asks politely?

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7. The nation’s prisons and jails are full of minority inmates, especially young men. Is that racist, and if so, what should be done about it? 8. How do you feel about Black jurors who engage in jury nullification? Did our system do something similar in the South when courts failed to convict white killers of Black civil rights protesters? 9. If corporations and government agencies locate 90 percent of the biohazards (such as sanitation plants) in minority communities and 10 percent in white ones, is that fair? Suppose that land is cheaper in the minority neighborhood, so that the decision is, on its face, economically rational. Is that a good reason for locating these facilities there? Suppose that minority people have flocked to these areas because of the well-­paying jobs they offer or because housing is cheaper there. 10. If a U.S. corporation pays a Thai woman $1.10 per hour to work a ten-­hour shift in a hot, noisy factory, and the prevailing rate in Thailand is $1.00 per hour for an eleven-­hour workday, is that fair? Suppose that she insists that she wants to work there? What is a fair minimum wage in a developed country such as the United States? 11. Blacks, Chicanos, and Asians are constantly outvoted by whites in elections, but is anything wrong with that? Shouldn’t the majority rule? 12. Latinos are now 19 percent of the U.S. population and outnumber Blacks as the largest ethnic minority group. Where do Latinos figure into the civil rights equation? Are they more like Blacks? Whites? American Indians? Asian Americans? And

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who decides? Should they qualify for affirmative action and other government programs? 13. Many of us like to think that society is less racist now than before, at least in a raw sense. But hate speech seems to be increasing in the age of self-­publishing platforms like blogs, the internet, podcasts, and talk radio. If so, what is the solution? Don’t conservative radio personalities and anonymous users of the internet have the right to say what they think? 14. The British and French colonial administrators wielded power over large native populations through a variety of strategies, including co-­opting local elites by giving them midlevel jobs in the colonial administration and preaching Western superiority. Now that the U.S. population is beginning to resemble that of a colonial state, with a minority of whites and a preponderance of people of color, will these same neocolonial strategies find use once again? Is this already happening? What if one of your classmates of color aspires to be a middle manager at a white-­ dominated corporation. Is he or she like a civil servant under colonial India? 15. Most people today believe that hate speech ought to be discouraged. Even if one is angry at another individual, we think it is wrong to call him by a name marking an ethnic slur (“You ____”). Suppose a rapper uses the same word. Is that hate speech? Why or why not? 16. What should a social activist do if her or his own school or other organization refuses to hire minorities, denies domestic-­ partner benefits to gay couples, and refuses to explore renewable sources of energy to run its campus or building?

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Sug ge st e d R e a di ng s Albright, Madeline, Fascism: A Warning (2019). Alexander, Michelle, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness (2010). Black Lives Matter, https://blacklivesmatter.com. Butler, Paul, Chokehold: Policing Black Men (2017). Crenshaw, Kimberlé, The First Decade: Critical Reflections, or “A Foot in the Closing Door,” 49 UCLA L. Rev. 1343 (2002). Delgado, Richard & Jean Stefancic, Hate Speech in Cyberspace, 49 Wake Forest L. Rev. 319 (2014). ———. An Interest-­Convergence Explanation of the 2020–­2022 Conservative Attack on Critical Race Theory, J.L. in Soc. (2022, forthcoming). Driving While Black, PBS (2020). Economic Justice, Race, Gender, Identity, and Economics (Emma Coleman Jordan & Angela P. Harris eds., 2d ed. 2022) Erman, Sam & Gregory M. Walton, Stereotype Threat and Antidiscrimination Law: Affirmative Steps to Promote Meritocracy and Racial Equality in Education, 88 S. Cal. L. Rev. 307 (2015). George, Janel, A Lesson on Critical Race Theory, Human Rights (Amer. Bar Assoc.), Jan. 11, 2021. Hannah-­Jones, Nikole, The 1619 Project (2019). Harris, Angela P., From Precarity to Positive Freedom: ClassCrits at Seven—­Symposium Introduction, 44 S.W. L. Rev 621 (2015). Hasen, Richard L., Cheap Speech: Saving American Elections in the Disinformation Era (2022). Hernández, Tanya Katerí, Racial Innocence: Unmasking Latino Anti-­Black Bias and the Struggle for Equality (2022).

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Hoadley-­Brill, Critical Race Theory’s Critics Are Sure It’s Bad. Whatever It Is, Wash. Post, July 2, 2021. Irons, Peter, White Men’s Law: The Roots of Systemic Racism (2021). Johnson, Jason, Critical Race Theory Is a Convenient Target for Conservatives, Slate, June 12, 2021. Johnson, Kevin R., Opening the Floodgates: Why America Needs to Rethink Its Borders and Immigration Laws (2007). MacKinnon, Catharine, Weaponizing the First Amendment: An Equality Reading, 106 Va. L. Rev. 1223 (2020). Pellow, David, Toward a Critical Environmental Justice Studies: Black Lives Matter As an Environmental Justice Challenge, Du Bois Rev. Aug. 15, 2016. Pruitt, Lisa R., Who’s Afraid of White Class Migrants? On Denial, Discrediting, and Disdain (and Toward a Richer Concept of Diversity), 31 Colum. J. Gender & L. 196 (2015). Sander, Richard & Stuart Taylor, Jr., Mismatch: How Affirmative Action Hurts the Students It’s Supposed to Help and Why Universities Won’t Admit It (2015). Simon, Jonathan, Mass Incarceration on Trial (2014). Stoll, William, The Problem with Confederate Monuments: State Laws as Barriers for Removal, 26 UC Davis Soc. Just. L. Rev. 91 (2022).

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VIII

CONCLUSION

Chapter 7 described critical race theory today. Now, it is time to offer some thoughts on the future. This will include hazarding some predictions on the range of problems that civil rights activists and theorists may face as well as the choices for tackling them. Finally, we consider how the establishment may react to some of the movement’s efforts. A . T HE F U T U R E

Imagine a female infant born in the year 2022. She might be white, Black, brown, Asian, or mixed race. The color does not matter. Her religion might be Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, or atheist. The religion does not matter. What sort of world will she inherit? During her early years, the number of Blacks and Latinos will be almost equal, with Asians a fast-­ growing minority as well. Whites, however, will continue to be in the numerical majority only until about 2042, by which year she will be barely 20, and whites will remain the largest single group into the foreseeable future. At first, our child is apt to grow up in a segregated neighborhood and attend segregated schools. Courts have been ending desegregation decrees, while conservatives have been lobbying effectively for the end of affirmative action in higher 15 4

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C onclusion 15 5

education—­and may succeed despite the Supreme Court’s ruling upholding that practice in Fisher v. University of Texas. U.S. wealth is sharply split between a very well-­to-­do group at the top of the socioeconomic ladder and everybody else. If our child is lucky enough to be born into a well-­to-­do family, she may grow up in a gated community with excellent services, schools, and private security forces. If not, she will live—­if white—­at a level roughly comparable to a midlevel European country, such as Spain or Italy, or—­if Black or brown—­a struggling Third World country. The economy, based on information technology and a large service sector, will do little to alter this distribution of wealth and influence. A few decades later, as our young woman approaches midlife, conditions may change. U.S. minorities of color will grow in numbers and begin, for the first time, to pose political and economic competition for whites. The number of minority judges, business executives, and politicians holding elective office will inexorably increase. At the same time, globalization and the need to cultivate business with developing countries will accelerate the need for multicultural, multiracial people who can speak other languages and interact easily with their foreign counterparts. Minorities will find new niches in the world economy. Will this power shift occur peacefully or only after a long struggle? The reader’s guess is as good as ours. One school of social science holds that socioeconomic competition heightens racial tensions, at least in the short run. At the same time, interest-­convergence theory suggests that as the world becomes more cosmopolitan, and minority status and

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15 6  Conclusion

linguistic competence evolve into positive assets, the opposite may occur, much as it has done during wartime. (See Philip A. Klinkner & Rogers M. Smith, The Unsteady March: The Rise and Decline of Racial Equality in America [1999].) If so, barriers against minority homeownership, job mobility, and entry to universities and colleges may ease somewhat. Colleges and workplaces will try new programs to increase the flow of minorities into the market; scholars and lawyers will find new legal theories, acceptable to courts, allowing this to happen. Workplaces will heed the call of Devon Carbado and Mitu Gulati and stop pressuring minority workers to perform extra work on the job to minimize their Blackness or brownness and reassure their fellow workers that they are not frightening, foreign, or incompetent. With luck, our hypothetical person, nearing the end of her life, will experience a peaceful transition to a more inclusive, polyglot America. A third Reconstruction, somewhat along the lines of the 1960s, may take place, but more slowly, surely, and irreversibly. B . A CR I T I CA L R ACE AG ENDA FO R T HE NE W CEN T U RY

Of course, the peaceful transition just described may not take place—­the white establishment may resist an orderly progression toward sharing power, particularly in connection with upper-­level and technical jobs, police agencies, and government. As happened in South Africa, the change may be convulsive and cataclysmic. If so, critical theorists and activists will need to provide criminal defense for resistance movements and activists and to articulate theories and

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strategies for that resistance. They may even need to protect themselves. Or a third, intermediate regime may set in. As mentioned earlier, whites may deploy neocolonial mechanisms, including token concessions and the creation of a host of light-­skinned minority middle managers to stave off the transfer of power as long as possible. But assuming that the transition proceeds and is relatively peaceable, civil rights activists and scholars will need to address a host of issues as the United States changes complexion. These include the continued deconstruction of race, so that biological theories of inferiority and hierarchy cannot ever again arise. They include further efforts to erase barriers to upward mobility for minority populations, especially old-­ fashioned tests and standards for merit, such as the SAT, that currently stand in the way. Prompted by critical theorists, some schools and universities are doing this now. Those efforts will include measures, such as economic boycotts, aimed at increasing minority representation in the media. Countering publishers, writers, cartoonists, movie producers, and internet providers who continue to distribute demeaning caricatures of minorities will become vital. Rectifying racism in policing and the criminal justice system will take on urgency, so that young minority men have a better chance of going to college than to jail. These efforts will also include sentencing reform and attention to postconviction consequences such as felony disenfranchisement that otherwise will haunt an offender for the rest of his or her life. In short, assuring that minority viewpoints and interests are taken into account in every major policy decision the na-

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15 8  Conclusion

tion makes should become the normal order of business, as though by second nature. Critical race theorists will need to take part in the development of new immigration policies that allow a freer flow of workers and capital while assuring that the new arrivals do not enter on terms that weaken the ability of current workers to unionize and seek workplace reforms. Immigration law’s defects will need attention so that people, including young, often unaccompanied children, escaping totalitarian regimes do not end up in large detention centers or deported back to whence they came, suffering nightmares, impaired cognitive development, other psychic ills, and even death in the process. These activists will need to assure that society cease requiring assimilation as a ticket for admission to jobs, neighborhoods, and schools and that minorities who choose to retain their culture, language, accent, religion, or ways of dress may do so without penalty. They will need to pursue zealously the goal of economic democracy, so that the currently disproportionate numbers of people of color who suffer intense poverty receive a decent level of services, health care, and education so that they—­or at least their children—­ have a chance of taking part in mainstream American life. They will need to clarify as well the relationship between race and class as separate but overlapping vectors of disadvantage. Above all, they will need to marshal every conceivable argument, and exploit every chink, crack, and glimmer of interest convergence, to make these reforms palatable to a majority that only at a few times in its history has seen fit to tolerate them; then they will need to assure, through ap-

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propriate legislation and other structural measures, that the reforms cannot easily be undone. This may necessitate making connections with counterparts in foreign countries so as to draw on their experiences and learn from each other. C. L IK ELY R E SP O N SE S TO T HE CR I T I CA L R ACE T HEO RY M OV EMEN T

Assuming that the future goes roughly as we have outlined—­ with difficulty, resistance, and thinly veiled repression in the short run but broader vistas beginning a few decades in the future—­and assuming that CRT takes on many of the tasks outlined in the preceding section, what does the future hold for CRT as a movement? A number of options seem possible.

1. Critical Race Theory Becomes the New Civil Rights Orthodoxy CRT could become the new civil rights orthodoxy. The voter-­ representation schemes (including cumulative voting and ranked choice, described in chapter 7) put forward by Lani Guinier and others could be enacted, assuring a larger number of mayors, senators, and members of Congress of color. Courts could soften their approach to hate-­speech regulation, as urged by authors such as Mari Matsuda, Charles Lawrence, and Richard Delgado, perhaps realizing that an increasingly multicultural society cannot tolerate concerted marginalization and revilement of a substantial segment of its membership. Nativism against Latinos might ease, and the nation may adopt a

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16 0  Conclusion

new, more liberal immigration policy. The critique of color blindness may, one day, persuade the U.S. Supreme Court to accept race-­conscious measures in employment and education, leveling the playing field for those who have long been excluded from society’s bounty. A new “Americanized” federal Indian law policy, as advocated by Robert Williams, might recognize Indian tribes, unequivocally, as sovereign nations. The nation might begin considering reparations toward this group, as well as toward Black people, whose ancestors were enslaved, and Chicanos and Puerto Ricans, whose lands were seized and homelands colonized. Critical race theory may even follow the example of critical legal studies, which embedded itself so thoroughly in academic scholarship and teaching that its precepts became commonplace, part of the conventional wisdom. This may, in fact, be happening. Consider how in many disciplines scholars, teachers, and courses profess, almost incidentally, to embrace critical race theory. Consider as well how many influential commentators, journalists, and books, such as Michelle Alexander’s The New Jim Crow or Peter Irons’s White Men’s Law, develop critical themes while hardly mentioning their origins in critical thought. Might critical race theory one day diffuse into the atmosphere, like air, so that we are hardly aware of it anymore?

2. Critical Race Theory Marginalized and Ignored The new race scholars could also be ignored, as they were in the movement’s early days (see chapter 1). Presidents, college faculties, and commissions on race could go back to seeking

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counsel from the voices of incrementalism and color blindness, perhaps out of a desire to engage in denial or to “keep the lid on” as long as possible.

3. Critical Race Theory Analyzed but Rejected The movement has already drawn its share of detractors who see it as overly radical, inconsistent with Enlightenment philosophy, and a bad example to minority communities and schoolchildren. More could be persuaded to this point of view, especially if right-­wing talk radio and websites continue to proliferate and gain popularity or if the country’s party politics shift radically.

4. Partial Incorporation A perhaps more likely outcome is that some aspects of critical race theory will be accepted by society’s mainstream and halls of power, while other parts of it will continue to meet resistance. The narrative turn and storytelling scholarship seem well on their way toward acceptance, as does the critique of merit. The rise of social media has only accelerated these trends. Intersectionality seems well entrenched in women’s studies and other disciplines. More radical features, such as recognition that the status quo is inherently unjust rather than merely sporadically and accidentally so, seem less likely to gain acceptance. The need for regulation of hate crime and speech will probably become evident, as it has to dozens of European and Commonwealth nations.

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162  Conclusion

If even these relatively mild insights of critical race theory win adoption, however, the effort will not have been in vain. American society, not to mention its intellectual community, seem receptive to thinking (if not acting) more creatively about race than they have done. Certainly, mainstream liberal civil rights law has been generating little excitement; neither has it provided much in the way of support for minority communities in great need of it. Perhaps if outsider scholars—­and new converts and fellow travelers—­persist, their work in time will come to seem not so strange or even radical; change may come to American society, however slowly and painfully. Virginia’s statute does not run afoul of the First Amendment insofar as it bans cross burning with intent to intimidate. Unlike the statute at issue in R.A.V., the Virginia statute does not single out for opprobrium only that speech directed toward “one of the specified disfavored topics.” It does not matter whether an individual burns a cross with intent to intimidate because of the victim’s race, gender, or religion, or because of the victim’s “political affiliation, union membership, or homosexuality.” . . . The First Amendment permits Virginia to outlaw cross burnings done with the intent to intimidate because burning a cross is a particularly virulent form of intimidation. . . . Virginia may choose to regulate this subset of intimidating messages in light of cross burning’s long and pernicious history as a signal of impending violence. Virginia v. Black, 538 U.S. 343, 344–­45 (2003)

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CL A S SRO O M E X ERCI SE

Write down five predictions for how you see America’s racial scene developing twenty-­five years from now. Put this paper in a safe place for future reference. Before doing so, compare notes with three other persons in your class or study group. How many of your predictions overlap? Possible areas you may wish to consider: Will the United States ever have a Black woman president? (In the first edition of this book, we asked how soon readers thought a Black president would arrive.) A Latina/o? An Asian American? A gay, lesbian, or transgender leader? Will the United States ever have open immigration? Or will it take the opposite tack of greatly limiting entry? Will minority numbers really exceed those of whites midway in the twenty-­ first century, as many demographers believe? What will happen then? Will race and racism ever disappear? Will the Human Genome Project show that the eugenicists and race­IQ researchers were at least partly right and that real, nontrivial differences do mark the races? Intermarriage between Blacks and whites is now very low—­on the order of a few percent of all marriages. Will this increase? Will a crisis cause all racialized minorities to unite in a powerful coalition—­ and, if so, what sort of crisis could produce that result? Suppose the country experiences another terrorist attack of the order of 9/11. What will it do to your predictions?

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16 4  Conclusion

Questions and Comments for Conclusion 1. It is said that the arrow of progress moves as often backward as forward. Which of the scenarios described in this chapter—­or yet some other—­do you see as most likely for America’s racial future? 2. What role do you see for leftist political theory, such as CRT, in the years ahead? What role do you see for yourself? 3. The philosopher Søren Kierkegaard once said that we are doomed to lead life forward but only to understand it backward, that is, in retrospect. Is this more or less true of relations among the races? (See chapter 2, discussing the “empathic fallacy.”) 4. Critical race theory is expanding into other countries and academic disciplines, such as ethnic studies, political science, women’s studies, and American studies. It is also beginning to change how we approach crime, policing, and sentencing policy. Will the same happen, after a time, in other societies such as China and Indonesia and other disciplines such as medicine? 5. Two crits (Devon Carbado and Mitu Gulati) point out that minority workers often find themselves performing “extra work” when they devote a great deal of time and energy to reassuring white fellow workers that they are just like them, that is, are not threats, inscrutable, or seething under the surface and have the same range of interests as they do. Suppose the balance tips, so that whites are in a minority in the workplace. Will whites have to engage in “performative identity,” perhaps in order to reassure their colleagues of color that they are hip, cool, musical, and nonthreatening too?

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C onclusion 16 5

Sug ge st e d R e a di ng s Bowen, William G. & Derek Bok, The Shape of the River: Long-­ Term Consequences of Considering Race in College and University Admissions (1998). Carbado, Devon W. & Cheryl Harris, The New Racial Preferences, 96 Cal. L. Rev. 1139 (2008). Charting the Future of College Affirmative Action (Gary Orfield, Patricia Marin, Stella M. Flores & Liliana M. Garces eds., 2007). Critical Race Studies program (UCLA School of Law), www.law. ucla.edu. cummings, andré douglas pond, A Furious Kinship: Critical Race Theory and the Hip-­Hop Nation, 48 U. Louisville L. Rev. 499 (2010). Feagin, Joe R. & Kimberly Ducey, Racist America, Current Realities, and Future Reparations (4th ed. 2019). Hochschild, Jennifer L., Looking Ahead: Racial Trends in the United States, 134 Daedalus 70 (Winter 2005). Oliver, Melvin L. & Thomas M. Shapiro, Black Wealth/White Wealth: A New Perspective on Racial Inequality (2d ed., 2006). Our Next Race Question: The Uneasiness Between Blacks and Latinos, Harper’s, April 1996, at 55. Parker, Kim, et al., Views of America’s Future in 2050, Pew Res. Center, March 21, 2019. Piketty, Thomas, Capital in the Twenty-­First Century (2017).

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GLOSSARY OF TERMS

accent discrimination: Discrimination, for example, by an employer against a worker, on the basis of a foreign-­sounding accent; or the assumption that native English speakers should not have to make an effort to understand accented English. affirmative action: Policy that strives for increased minority enrollment, activity, or membership, often with the intention of diversifying a certain environment such as a school or workplace. Afrocentrism: Intellectual position grounded in African values and ethos. Americanization: Effort by social workers to teach immigrants American customs, diets, and hygiene. amicus brief: Friend-­of-­the-­court document usually filed by an organization with an interest in a case. antisemitism: Attitude or behavior that is discriminatory toward Jewish people. antisnitching campaigns: Informal pressures not to cooperate with the police in investigating crimes. apartheid: Official separation of the races, as formerly in South Africa. Aryan r ace: Term applied to white people of northern European descent; often used to imply white supremacy. 16 7

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16 8  Conclusion

assimilation: Process of taking on social and cultural traits of the majority race in the nation in which one resides. aversive r acism: Attempts to avoid people of color or to be formal, correct, and cold in dealings with them. Aztlan: Mythical homeland for Latinos living in the United States. barrio: Latino neighborhood. bicultur al education: Pedagogical approach that encourages retention of a child’s original or family culture. bilingualism: Policy that emphasizes preservation of native languages. binary par adigm of r ace: Pattern of framing race issues in terms of two categories, such as Black and white. biological view of r ace: Once popular view that humanity is divided into four or five major groups, corresponding to objective and real physical differences. bir acial identity: Identity of a person whose heritage or culture encompasses more than one category. birthright citizenship: Status of persons born in the United States who automatically become citizens irrespective of their parents’ legal status. Black Panthers: Radical Black Power organization that sprang up in the 1960s and rejected integration and nonviolent change. Black r age: Legal defense notion, as yet unrecognized, holding that a criminal action that results from understandable racial anger or indignation should qualify for a partial excuse.

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C onclusion 169

black-­w hite binary: Binary paradigm that considers the black-­white relationship central to racial analysis. borderlands: Southwestern lands that lie close to the United States’ border with Mexico and still retain much Mexican culture and influence. Border Patrol: Federal agency charged with policing the border between the United States and Mexico, as well as between the United States and Canada. Br acero progr ams: Official programs that permit entry of temporary Mexican workers, especially for agriculture. broker class: Minorities, often well assimilated, educated, and light-­skinned, who perform tasks on behalf of dominantly white corporations, managing other minorities or helping the corporations sell products to the minority community. campus speech codes: University and college regulations that provide for discipline of speakers who insult or demean members of the campus community. capitalism: System in which market forces dictate economic decisions and most property is privately owned. Chicanos/Chicanas: Self-­designation adopted by many Mexican Americans living in the United States; often a term of pride. Chinese Exclusion Acts: Federal laws that prevented Chinese laborers from entering or reentering the United States. Civil Rights Acts: Federal statutes guaranteeing nondiscrimination in employment, housing, voting, education, and similar areas.

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170  Conclusion

civil rights movement: Effort to advance the interests of minority communities in achieving equal citizenship. class: Group of individuals who share a similar socioeconomic status. coalition politics: Joint approach by minority groups in pursuit of common ends. cognitive dissonance: Puzzlement at perceiving something that deviates from the expected, such as a Black astrophysicist who wins the Nobel Prize, or over an inconsistency between what one knows and how one has been acting. Cold War: Battle of position between the United States and the former Soviet Union that began shortly after the conclusion of World War II. colonialism: European effort to maintain control of weaker nations; the United States followed similar policy in the Philippines, the Caribbean, and Latin America. color blindness: Belief that one should treat all persons equally, without regard to their race. color imagery: Words, texts, and television images that associate skin color with traits such as innocence, criminality, or physical beauty. conservative backlash: Reaction of some persons and corporations to civil rights gains, often including campaigns against welfare, affirmative action, and immigration.

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C onclusion 17 1

contr adiction-­c losing case: Judicial decision handed down to conceal a widening gap between our ideals and the actual situation in the world, often the product of injustice. corrido: Latino folk song or lament, recounting a tale of heroic resistance or bravery in the face of danger. countermajoritarianism: View that the court system is free to strike down laws enacted by the majority that are unfair to minority groups. counterstorytelling: Writing that aims to cast doubt on the validity of accepted premises or myths, especially ones held by the majority. covering: Adopting the demeanor or appearance of a member of the majority group, especially for gays and lesbians concerned about job or housing discrimination. critical legal studies: Legal movement that challenged liberalism from the Left, denying that law is neutral, that every case has a single correct answer, and that rights are of vital importance. critical r ace feminism: Application of critical race theory to issues of concern to women of color. critical r ace masculinism: Application of critical race theory to the construction of male norms in society. critical r ace theory: Progressive legal movement that seeks to transform the relationship among race, racism, and power.

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17 2  Conclusion

critique of rights: Critical legal studies position that rights are alienating, ephemeral, and much less useful than most people think. cultur al defense: Criminal law strategy that shows that the accused’s crime was acceptable in his or her culture. cumulative voting: Reform in which voters may cast as many votes as positions that are up for election and may concentrate them on one individual if they choose. DACA: Federal program permitting young undocumented immigrants to remain in the country. deconstruction: Intellectual approach that targets traditional interpretations of terms, concepts, and practices, showing that they contain unsuspected meanings or internal contradictions. deportation: Process by which undocumented persons are expelled to their nation of origin. desegregation: Policy to integrate the races in schools or housing. determinism: View that individuals and culture are products of particular forces, such as economics, biology, or the search for high status. differential r acialization: Process by which each racial and ethnic group comes to be viewed and treated differently by mainstream society. discourse: Formal, extensive, oral or written treatment of a subject; the way we speak about something. discrimination: Practice of treating similarly situated individuals differently because of race, gender, sexual orientation, appearance, disability, or national origin.

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C onclusion 17 3

disenfr anchisement: Process by which citizens are deprived of voting or other rights of citizenship, for example, as a result of a felony conviction (“felon disenfranchisement”). diversity: Policy founded on the belief that individuals of different races and ethnicities can contribute to workplaces, schools, and other settings. double consciousness: Notion attributed to W. E. B. Du Bois that Black folks are able to see racial events from two perspectives—­that of the majority group and their own—­at the same time. Dreamers: Children of undocumented parents who have spent most of their lives in the United States but are not U.S. citizens and seek to remain here legally, for example, to enroll in college. driving while Black: Term for police practice of singling out minority drivers for special attention, such as by pulling them over and searching for drugs or contraband. See also profiling. education, critical r ace theory in: Scholarly movement that applies critical race theory to issues in the field of education, including high-­stakes testing, affirmative action, hierarchy in schools, tracking and school discipline, bilingual and multicultural education, and the debate over ethnic studies and the Western canon. empathic fallacy: Mistaken belief that sweeping social reform can be accomplished through speech and incremental victories within the system.

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174  Conclusion

English-­o nly movement: Movement that seeks to require the use of English solely in government services, voting, schools, and other settings. epithets: Pejoratives or slurs used to demean another person or group. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC): Federal agency charged with investigating employment discrimination. Equal Protection Clause: Part of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution that requires that states treat citizens equally. er asure: Practice of collective indifference to the identity, history, stories, and culture of a group, rendering them invisible. essentialism: Search for the unique essence of a group. ethnicity: Group characteristic often based on national origin, ancestry, language, or other cultural characteristic or pattern. eugenics: Attempt to better the quality of the human race through means such as sterilization, selective breeding, or mass extermination. Eurocentrism: Tendency to interpret the world in terms of European values and perspectives and the belief that they are superior. exceptionalism: Belief that a particular group’s history justifies treating it as unique and special. executive order: Presidential decree to a federal agency requiring it to carry out a demand emanating from the White House.

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C onclusion 175

false consciousness: Phenomenon in which oppressed people internalize and identify with attitudes and ideology of the controlling class. farmworkers’ movement: Organization spearheaded by César Chávez in the 1960s to improve health and safety standards and employment opportunities for farmworkers, including migrants. First Amendment: Amendment to the U.S. Constitution that provides for freedom of speech, religion, and assembly. formal equality: Belief that the law should only provide treatment and opportunity that are the same for all. Fourteenth Amendment: Amendment to the U.S. Constitution that provides for equal protection and due process. gay bashing: Violence or harsh words aimed at gays and lesbians. gay/lesbian (LGBT) or queer legal theory: Theory that places sexual orientation and liberation at the center of analysis. gerrymandering: Process of drawing voting districts to favor one party or racial group. greaser: Derogatory term for Mexicans or Chicanos. Also “spik” or “spick.” green card: Identification card proving that a noncitizen is a permanent legal resident within the United States. hate crime: A crime motivated by bias based on race, religion, color, national origin, sexual orientation, or other category designated by law.

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176  Conclusion

hate speech: Racial slurs and epithets or other harsh language that has no purpose other than to demean and marginalize other people or groups. hegemony: Domination by the ruling class and unconscious acceptance of that state of affairs by the subordinate group. heterosexism: Preference for straight relationships and view that same-­sex ones are unnatural. hip-­h op theory: Approach to racial justice that borrows ideas and attitudes from popular culture, especially rap music. hiring quotas: Policy of setting aside a specific number of slots or jobs for certain groups or people. Hispanic: Term for persons of Iberian or Spanish ancestry; now less commonly used than the terms “Latino” or “Chicano.” homophobia: Prejudice against lesbians and gays. hypodescent: “One-­drop rule” that holds that anyone with any degree of discernible African ancestry is Black. identity: That by which one defines oneself, such as straight, college-­educated, Filipina. ideology: Set of strongly held beliefs or values, especially dealing with governance of society. illegal alien: Pejorative term for undocumented worker, that is, one who works in the United States without holding official papers. immigr ant analogy: Belief that racialized minority groups, especially Latinos and Asians, will follow the same path of assimilation as white European ethnics.

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C onclusion 17 7

Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS): Federal agency formerly charged with enforcing immigration laws; its functions have now been taken up by the Department of Homeland Security. immigr ation reform: Collection of proposals to lessen undocumented entry, provide a path to citizenship, and “gain control over our borders.” imperialism: Political and economic domination of one nation or group over another. implicit bias: Unconscious association of one idea with another, such as race and personal qualities, frequently evincing a negative attitude. Often measured by the Implicit Association Test (IAT), which measures the speed by which a test-­taker can associate words with positive or negative valences with particular groups, such as whites and Blacks. indeterminacy: Idea that legal reasoning rarely, if ever, has exactly one right answer and that politics and social pressures on judges influence outcomes. Indian removal: Policy of relocating eastern Native American tribes to lands west of the Mississippi so that white settlers could take over their homelands. initiative process: Direct democracy by which citizens vote for laws without the intervention of their elected representatives. integr ation: Process of desegregating environments such as public schools or neighborhoods. interest convergence: Thesis pioneered by Derrick Bell that the majority group tolerates advances for racial justice only when it suits its interest to do so.

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178  Conclusion

internal colonialism: View that some domestic minority groups, particularly Mexicans and Puerto Ricans, are for all intents and purposes internal colonies of the United States. internment: Forced confinement of West Coast Japanese Americans in relocation camps during World War II. intersectionality: Belief that individuals (like Black women) and classes often have multiple, shared, or overlapping interests or traits. Jim Crow laws: Antiloitering laws, poll taxes, sundown provisions, and other measures enacted, usually in the South, in order to maintain white superiority even after slavery came to an end. judicial review: Policy under which courts determine whether laws are constitutional. jury nullification: Process by which a jury acquits a defendant even though the law would technically require conviction. Ku Klux Klan: Often referred to as the “KKK” or “Klan.” White-­supremacist organization originating in the nineteenth-­century South that has employed lynching, cross burnings, parades, and terrorism to intimidate African Americans, Mexicans, Catholics, and Jews. Latcrit (Latino-­c ritical) theory: Branch of critical race theory that considers issues of concern to Latinos, such as immigration, language rights, and multi-­identity.

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C onclusion 179

Latinos/Latinas: Persons of Latin American ancestry residing in the United States; sometimes called “Hispanic” or “Latinx.” legal doctrine: Rule of law derived from a legislative enactment or judicial opinion. legal realism: Early-­twentieth-­century forerunner of critical legal studies that disavowed mechanical jurisprudence in favor of social science, politics, and policy judgment. legal storytelling and narr ative: Using stories, parables, and first-­person accounts to understand and analyze racial issues. legitimacy: Quality of an institution, such as the law, that is viewed as justified and worthy of respect. liber alism: Political philosophy that holds that the purpose of government is to maximize liberty; in civil rights, the view that law should enforce formal equality in treatment of all citizens. majoritarianism: View that majority culture and attitudes should hold sway. Manifest Destiny: Mid-­nineteenth-­century ideology holding that U.S. territorial expansion was inevitable and just. maquiladoras: Assembly plants set up by U.S. corporations just inside the Mexican border to take advantage of cheap labor and lax workplace and environmental regulations. marketplace of ideas: Notion that free exchange of ideas best promotes truth and good government.

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180  Conclusion

Mar xism: Political, social, and economic doctrine of Karl Marx, in particular the view that capitalism exploits workers and promotes inequality. material determinism: Civil rights view, attributed to Derrick Bell, holding that racial practices and laws serve to line the pockets of empowered groups. melting pot: Assimilation metaphor holding that individuals and groups blend together to create a new society. merit: Conventional worthiness—­a concept that critical race scholars call into question because they hold that it is unfair to rank people according to mechanical scales and to distribute valuable social benefits accordingly. mestizos/mestizas: Person of mixed European and Indian ancestry, especially in countries that were once colonized by Spain. microaggression: Stunning small encounter with racism, usually unnoticed by members of the majority race. migr ant worker: Individual who moves from region to region to find work, especially in harvesting crops. mindset: State of mind or attitude, often unconscious. miscegenation: Marriage or cohabitation between individuals of different races; formerly prohibited by law when one of the parties was white. model minority myth: Idea that Asian Americans are hardworking, intelligent, and successful and that other groups should emulate them.

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C onclusion 181

multicultur alism: View that social institutions should reflect many cultures. multiple consciousness: Ability of people of color to perceive something in two or more ways, for example, as a member of his or her group would see it and as a white would. See double consciousness. multir acial category: A category for people with mixed racial background that many people think the U.S. Census should provide. multir acial person: Individual whose ancestry includes persons of different races. NAFTA: North American Free Trade Agreement that formerly allowed American corporations access to Mexican and Canadian markets. Superseded by the U.S.–­ Mexico–­Canada Agreement (USMCA). nationalism: View that a minority group should focus on its own affairs and interests first. nativism: View that the United States should give priority to its current citizenry and limit immigration. natur alization: Process of becoming a U.S. citizen. Negrophobe: One who irrationally fears or dislikes African Americans. neocolonialism: View that society is taking on the structure of a colonial society, with an occupying group maintaining control over a large but diffuse group, usually of color. normative: Of, pertaining to, or based on a norm, especially one regarded as broad or universal.

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18 2  Conclusion

one-­d rop rule: Rule of hypodescent, that any person with discernible Black ancestry is Black and can never be white. Oper ation Wetback: Government policy instituted in 1954–­1959 under which as many as 3.7 million Mexicans and Mexican Americans were deported, in violation of their civil liberties. par adigm: Reigning system of belief that controls what is seen as possible, relevant, and valid. passing: Crossing the color line and gaining acceptance into a race other than one’s original one. patriarchy: System of beliefs and practices in which men dominate and control women. perspectivalism: Belief that a person’s or group’s position or standpoint greatly influences how they see truth and reality. plenary power doctrine: Judicial view that congressional enactments concerning immigration are unreviewable by courts because Congress’s power in this area is unlimited. politics of respectability: Attitude that the minority community should distance itself from criminals and offenders in its midst and side with law enforcement. The opposite attitude—­politics of identification—­holds that the minority community should embrace and protect its young, even if they are minor lawbreakers. populist movement: Movement that focuses on the common people or workers.

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C onclusion 18 3

postmodernism: Critique of modernism, a previous system founded on Enlightenment thinking and philosophy, and capitalism. postr acial: The condition of being beyond race; an era when race no longer matters. poststructur alism: Critique of structuralism, an earlier movement that aimed to determine basic structural elements of social systems, especially in the social and behavioral sciences. prejudice: Belief or attitude, usually unfavorable, about a person or group before the facts are known; a prejudgment. principle of involuntary sacrifice: Notion, attributed to Derrick Bell, that the costs of civil rights advances are always placed on Black people or low-­ income whites. privilege: Right or advantage, often unwritten, conferred on some people but not others, usually without examination or good reason. profiling: Practice in which the authorities single out ethnic or racial minority persons for heightened suspicion or detention. See also driving while Black. property interest in whiteness: Idea that white skin and identity are economically valuable. See whiteness as property. public-­p rivate distinction: Notion that many types of law operate only in the public sector, for example, that one is free to rent a room in one’s personal home to anyone one wants.

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18 4  Conclusion

push-­p ull theory of migr ation: Idea that Mexicans come to the United States in accordance with the demand of the U.S. labor market or in response to adverse conditions in Mexico. r ace: Notion of a distinct biological type of human being, usually based on skin color or other physical characteristics. r ace tr aitor: A white person who identifies as Black in an effort to subvert white privilege and tacit assumptions that underlie racism. r acial fr aud and box-­c hecking: Action on the part of a nonminority person, or one with a very slight connection with a minority group, to gain the benefit of minority status, such as affirmative action. r acialization: Process of creating a race, such as Latinos; also injecting a racial element into a situation. See also differential r acialization. r acial realism: View that racial progress is sporadic and that people of color are doomed to experience only infrequent peaks followed by regressions. r acism: Any program or practice of discrimination, segregation, persecution, or mistreatment based on membership in a race or ethnic group. reasonable r acist: One who treats members of another group in racist fashion because he or she believes that, statistically, the other group is prone to crime or similar behavior. See statistical r acism.

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C onclusion 18 5

reconstruction: Period when society is attempting to redress racial wrongs consistently and in thoroughgoing fashion. redistricting: Process of redrawing geographical lines of political districts to achieve fairness in voting. redlining: Policy by insurance companies, banks, and mortgage lenders not to do business with potential buyers or homeowners in certain areas with a heavy minority population. repar ations: Forms of compensation, such as money, given to a group or class of individuals who have been wronged. restrictive covenants: Legally enforceable limitation on land use or occupancy, often created by the original homeowner or developer of neighborhoods. reverse discrimination: Discrimination aimed at the majority group. revisionist interpretation: View of history or an event that challenges the accepted one. rule of law: Legal formalism, which some theorists believe is necessary for order, stability, and cohesiveness in a society. segregation: Separation of individuals or groups by race. separ ate-­b ut-­e qual doctrine: Rule of law holding that separate-­but-­equal facilities for different races are constitutional under the Equal Protection Clause.

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18 6  Conclusion

separ atism: View that a racial minority group should separate itself from mainstream society and pursue its own interests primarily. See nationalism. silencing: Practice or speech that interferes with the ability of others to communicate. social construction: Process of endowing a group or concept with a delineation, name, or reality. standing: Rule that limits the person who may bring a lawsuit to the one who suffered the “injury in fact.” statistical r acism: The belief that merely because a group contains a larger percentage of criminals or evil-­ doers than others, it is justifiable to avoid them in social encounters. status quo: Current state, the way things are—­usually said to require a good reason before it is changed. stereotype: Fixed, usually negative, image of members of a group. stereotype threat: Tendency of test-­takers to perform poorly if they are conscious that an examination may confirm a widespread social image of them as intellectually inferior. stigmatization: Process of marking a person, thing, or group as an object of shame or disgrace. stock stories: Tales that a people commonly subscribe to and use to explain their social reality, for example, that African Americans who try hard will be accepted and succeed, or that Mexican immigrants will take Black jobs.

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C onclusion 18 7

structur al determinism: Concept that a mode of thought or a widely shared practice determines significant social outcomes, usually without our conscious knowledge. subordination: Process of rendering a particular group of lesser importance, as through racial discrimination, patriarchy, or classism. sweatshop: Factory where workers, such as recent immigrants or Third World women, work under unsafe conditions, often for low pay. terr a nullius: British doctrine according to which colonial land belonged to the settling nation. See also Manifest Destiny. Title VII: Federal law that governs employment discrimination. Tr ail of Tears: Route used for forced removal of certain Native American nations from the southeastern United States to lands west of the Mississippi River. See also Indian removal. tr ansparency: Tendency of whiteness to disguise itself and become invisible. tribal sovereignty: View that American Indian nations and tribes are separate political entities (nations) and entitled to treatment as such. unconscious r acism: Racism that operates at an unconscious or subtle level. undocumented worker: U.S. immigrant who has not obtained legal status.

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18 8  Conclusion

vigilante: An individual who sets out to enforce the law on his or her own and without official authorization, for example, a border vigilante. voice: Ability of a group, such as African Americans or women, to articulate experience in ways unique to it. WASP: Term for persons of white, Anglo-­Saxon, Protestant descent. whiteness: Quality pertaining to Euro-­American people or traditions. whiteness as property: Notion that whiteness itself has value for its possessor and conveys a host of privileges and benefits. See property interest in whiteness. white privilege: Bundle of benefits that accrue to white people on account of their skin color, especially in social settings. woke: Term for a person who is excessively preoccupied with racial fairness; “being woke” describes this preoccupation.

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INDEX

accent discrimination, 78, 84, 94, 128; definition of, 167 Acuña, Rodolfo, and nationalism, 70 affirmative action, 132–­138; and class, 121; critique of, 134–­138; defense of, 134; definition of, 167; and white privilege, 91 African Americans: and environmental justice, 119–­120; and home ownership, 118, 121 Afrocentrism, definition of, 167 Aguilar v. Avis Rent a Car System, Inc., 107–­108 Alfieri, Anthony, and stories in clinical lawyering, 54 Americanization, definition of, 167 amicus brief, definition of, 167 antiessentialism, 10–­11; and Latinos, 93. See also essentialism/antiessentialism debate anti-­Semitism, definition of, 167 antisnitching campaigns, 63; definition of, 167 apartheid, definition of, 167 Arizona: and English only laws, 131; and high school ethnic studies programs, 69, 132; and laws against undocumented people, 132 Aryan race, definition of, 167 Asians: and critical legal theory, 3, 94–­96; leading scholars, 6; model minority stereotype, 94, 103; and whiteness, 82 assimilation, 66–­69; definition of, 168 aversive racism, definition of, 168

Avis. See Aguilar v. Avis Rent a Car System, Inc. Aztlan, 70; definition of. 168 Bakke, Allan, and affirmative action, 39, 133 barrio, definition of, 168 beauty, standards of, 83, 145 Bell Curve, The, and affirmative action, 134 Bell, Derrick, xv, 4, 6, 9, 22–­24, 37, 39, 46, 49, 55, 68, 104, 117, 143, 177, 180 bicultural education, definition of, 168 bilingualism, definition of, 168 binary paradigm of race: definition of, 168; historical harms of, 80–­82. See also black-­white binary biological view of race, definition of, 168. See also race biracial identity, definition of, 168. See also multiracial birthright citizenship, definition of, 168 black exceptionalism. See exceptionalism black judges, and racial injustice, 12, 46 Black Lives Matter, 127 Black Panthers, definition of, 168 black rage, definition of, 168 black women: and dilemma of intersectionality, 60–­62 black-­white binary, 77–­84; consequences of, 80–­83; definition of, 169 book banning, in Tucson school district, 69 Border Patrol, definition of, 169

189

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190 | Index

borderlands, definition of, 169 box checking, 83. See also racial fraud bracero programs, definition of, 169 broker class, definition of, 169. See also minority middle managers Brown v. Board of Education, 9, 22–­24, 30, 133 Buffalo Soldiers, 82 Butler, Paul, 6, 127 buying a car, 2 California, and Proposition 187, 82 campus climate, 130 campus speech codes, definition of, 169. See also hate speech capitalism, 57, 109, 139; definition of, 169. See also class; economic democracy; hypercapitalism Carbado, Devon, 6, 74, 107, 156 Carino v. University of Oklahoma, 84–­85 categorical thinking: and identity, 143; and intersectionality, 59–­64; and race, 20, 32–­34, 79, 143–­145; and whiteness, 85. See also black-­white binary Chicanas/Chicanos, definition of, 169 Chin, Vincent, 94 Chinese Exclusion Act, 81; definition of, 169 citizenship, racial qualification for, 87–­88 Civil Rights Acts, definition of, 169 civil rights discourse: and critical race theory, 3, 5–­6. See also liberalism; rights civil rights movement, definition of, 170 class, 108–­109; and affirmative action, 136–­137; definition of, 170; intersection of race and, 117–­122; theory of, 117 classism, and beggar story, 19–­20

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classroom exercises, 36, 38, 71, 92, 110, 145, 163 coalition politics, 83–­84; definition of, 170; and globalization, 119, 139–­140 Cochran, Johnnie, 54 cognitive dissonance, definition of, 170 Cold War, 23; definition of, 170 colonialism: definition of, 170; effect on globalization, 136; legacy of, 136–­137 color blindness, 8–­9; and affirmative action, 132–­138; and the Constitution, 26; definition of, 170; and judging, 12, 26–­28; and racial remedies, 26–­28 color consciousness in judicial decisions, 26–­28 color imagery, 86–­87; definition of, 170 Commonwealth v. Local Union 542, International Union of Operating Engineers, 12, 46 Confederate symbols and flags, 130 conservative(s): and affirmative action, 134; agenda, 30; campaigns, 104, 115–­ 116; definition of, backlash, 170 contradiction-­closing cases, 39; definition of, 171 coram nobis, and Hirabayashi case, 95–­96 corrido, definition of, 171 countermajoritarianism, definition of, 171 counterstorytelling, 51–­52; definition of, 171; power of, 52–­54; about racial subordination, 50–­51. See also legal storytelling and narrative covering, 74, definition of, 171 covering, definition of, 171 Crenshaw, Kimberlé, xv, 6 crime: defining, 123; white collar, 52, 123 criminal justice system, and minorities, 122–­127 critical legal research, 33–­34 critical legal studies: and critical race theory, 5, 160; definition of, 171

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Index | 191

critical race feminism, 96–­97; definition of, 171 critical race masculinism, definition of, 171 critical race theory: and activism, 8, 106–­108; and affirmative action, 132–­138; attack on, 104–­106, 115–­116; and charge of anti-­Semitism, 103–­ 104; and class, 117–­122; and color blindness, 27–­28; and conservative campaigns, 104–­106, 115–­116; and context, 66; and critical legal studies, 5; criticism of, 102–­111; and critique of merit, 103–­104, 135–­138; definition of, 3, 171; and economic democracy, 109, 139–­140; in education, 7, 173; and empirical analysis, 146–­147; and ethnic studies, 6; and feminism, 5; front-­burner issues of, 116–­143; future of, 154–­159; and identity, 143–­145; and interest convergence, 20–­25; internal critique of, 106–­108; and legal indeterminacy, 5; and legal storytelling, 45–­ 55; and liberalism, 5, 6, 22, 26–­31, 64–­65; and material determinism, 9, 20–­24, 180; and nationalism, 66–­7 1; origins of, xv–­x vii, 3–­4; and philosophy, 8; principal figures in, 6–­7; and racial realism, 20–­24; and relationship to previous movements, 5–­6; and relevance outside U.S., 110; and revisionist history, 25–­26; and social construction of race, 9, 21; spin-­off movements of, 3–­4, 7–­8; and spread to other countries, 8, 110–­111; and structural determinism, 31–­39; tenets of, 8–­11; themes of, 19–­39; and theory, 105–­106 critical white studies, 85–­92 critique of liberalism. See liberalism, critique of critique of merit. See merit, critique of

Delgado_CRT_4th_Ed.indd 191

critique of rights, definition of, 172 critique of rights. See rights, critique of cultural defense, definition of, 172 culture of poverty. See poverty cummings, andré, 6 cumulative voting, 142, 159; definition of, 172. See also voting DACA, definition of, 172 darkness, associated with evil, 86 Dawes Act, 81 deconstruction, definition of, 172 Delgado, Richard, xv, 4, 26, 51–­52, 102–­103, 159 deportation, definition of, 172 desegregation, definition of, 172 determinism, definition of, 172. See also material determinism; structural determinism differend, 53–­54 differential racialization, 10–­11, 79–­80; definition of, 172. See also racialization discourse, definition of, 172 discrimination: accent, 78, 84, 94, 128; definition of, 172; difficulty of intersectional claim of, 60–­62; failure of colorblind programs to redress, 65, 119–­124; housing, 118; and legal storytelling, 51; proxy, 93; reverse, 28, 49, 91, 134, 185; statistical, 123; 186; workplace, 60–­62, 108, 147, 172. See also oppression disenfranchisement: definition of, 173; felon, 124, 139, 155. See also voting diversity, definition of, 173 divisive concepts and messages, 105 double consciousness, 48, definition of, 173 double minorities, 66 dreamers, 43; definition of, 173 Driver, Justin, 110 driving while black, definition of, 173. See also racial profiling

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192 | Index

Du Bois, W. E. B., and double consciousness, 48 Dudziak, Mary, 23–­24 economic democracy, 10, 139–­140, 158. See also class economic determinism. See material determinism education, critical race theory in: definition of, 173; development of, 7 empathic fallacy, 34–­37; definition of, 173 empathy, 35–­37, 48; and sentencing, 36, 125 empirical analysis, and racial oppression, 146–­148 employment discrimination. See discrimination: workplace; Title VII English-­only movement: definition of, 174; statutes, 128–­129 environmental justice movement, 118–­119 epithets, definition of, 174. See also hate speech; racial insults Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), definition of, 174 Equal Protection Clause, 133; definition of, 174 equality, colorblind, 8 erasure, definition of, 174 essentialism, 64–­66; definition of, 174 essentialism/antiessentialism debate, 64–­66. See also antiessentialism ethnicity, definition of, 174 eugenics, definition of, 174 Eurocentrism, definition of, 174 European Americans, and whiteness, 89 “everything must change at once,” 91 exceptionalism: black, 79; and coalitions, 83; definition of, 174 exclusion of minority scholarship, 102–­103 Executive Order, definition of, 174; prohibiting divisive concepts, 105

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false consciousness, definition of, 175 Farber, Daniel, and critique of critical race theory, 55, 102–­104 farmworkers’ movement, definition of, 175 feminism, and critical race theory, 5. See also critical race feminism First Amendment: definition of, 175; and speech rights, 29, 106, 125–­126, 128–­129 formal equality, definition of, 175 Fourteenth Amendment, definition of, 175 Fox News, 104 Freeman, Alan, 4, 6, 39 Gallo. See People ex rel. Joan Gallo v. Acuna gangs, 123–­124 gay bashing, definition of, 175 gay/lesbian (LGBT) or queer legal theory, xvi, 97, 115, definition of, 175 gerrymandering, definition of, 175 Gertner, Judge Nancy, 126 globalization, 138–­142; and possibility of worldwide worker coalitions, 139–­140 Gómez, Laura, 6 Gotanda, Neil, 6 greaser, definition of, 175. See also hate speech green card, definition of, 175 Greene County boot camp, 29 Grutter v. Bollinger, 134, 138, 146 Guinier, Lani, 6, 106, 159 Gulati, Mitu, 6, 74, 107, 156 Haney López, Ian, 6, 50, 85 Harlan, Justice John: and the Chinese, 82; and dissent in Plessy v. Ferguson, 27, 133 Harris, Angela, xiii–­xvii, 6 Harris, Cheryl, 6, 85 Harvard Law School, xv, 6, 104

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Index | 193

hate crime, definition of, 175 hate speech, 34–­35, 127–­131; and Aguilar v. Avis Rent a Car System, Inc., 108; and campus climate, 130; definition of, 176; on the Internet, 130; jurisprudence in Canada, 128; and Monteiro v. Tempe Union High School District, 40; remedies for, 127–­1 28; and Taylor v. Metzger, 26, 80, 129; and Words That Wound, 26 hegemony, 48; definition of, 176 heterosexism, definition of, 176 Higginbotham, Judge Leon, 12, 46 hip-­hop theory, and criminal law, 127; definition of, 176 Hirabayashi v. United States, 95–­96 hiring quotas, definition of, 176 Hispanic, definition of, 176 homeostasis, and law reform, 39 homophobia, definition of, 176 hydra, two-­headed, of race, 91 hypercapitalism, 109, 139. See also capitalism hypodescent, definition of, 176 idealists: and identity, 143–­145; and social construction of race, 9, 21; and strategies for law reform, 25–­26 identity, 10–­11, 108–­109, 143–­145; definition of, 176 ideology, definition of, 176 illegal alien, definition of, 176 immigrant analogy, definition of, 176 Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), definition of, 177 immigration: activism, 93; definition of, 177; enforcement, 132; law and policy, 87–­89, 140–­141; and probable cause laws, 93; and whiteness, 87–­89 imperialism, definition of, 177 Implicit Association Test (IAT), 13; use of, 147 implicit bias, 13, 147; definition of, 177

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indeterminacy, legal, 5; definition of, 177 Indian Appropriation Act, 81 Indian removal, definition of, 177 indigenous movements: and people’s rights, 3; and resistance to hypercapitalism, 139–­140 initiative process, definition of, 177 integration, definition of, 177 interest convergence, 9, 20–­24, 50; critique of, 110; definition of, 177; and demographic shift, 155–­156; and Derrick Bell, 22–­24, 110 internal colonialism, 70, 93; definition of, 178; and location of biohazards, 118 internment, definition of, 178. See also Japanese Americans interracial. See multiracial intersectionality, 10–­11, 59–­64, 95; and claims for discrimination, 60–­62; definition of, 178; of race and poverty, 121; and women’s studies, 161 intersectionality, definition of, 178 Japanese Americans: internment of, 83, 95–­96, 141; and reparations, 96; and whiteness requirement for citizenship, 87–­88 Jersey Heights Neighborhood Ass’n v. Glendening, 119–­120 Jim Crow laws, definition of, 178 Johnson, Kevin, 6 Johnson, Lyndon (Pres.), 133 judicial review, definition of, 178 jury nullification, 124; definition of, 178 Kang, Jerry, 6 Kennedy, Randall, and critique of critical race theory, 102–­103; response to, by critical race scholars, 103–­104 King, Martin Luther, Jr., 132 Korematsu v. United States, and NAACP, 83

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19 4 | Index

Ku Klux Klan, definition of, 178 Kuhn, Thomas, 52–­53 language rights, 127–­132 LatCrit theory, xvi, 3, 93, 144; definition of, 178 Latino/a critical legal theory. See LatCrit theory Latinos/Latinas: and black-­white binary, 78, 82–­84, 93; and box checking, 169; definition of, 179; and identity, 144; and nationalism, 69; and nativism, 93; unique problems of, 93–­94 law reform: and counterstorying, 51–­52; and homeostasis, 39; idealist perspectives for, 20, 25–­26, 143–­144; and legal research tools, 32–­33; materialist perspectives for, 25, 143–­144 Lawrence, Charles, 6, 107, 159 legal concepts and categories, 32–­34 legal doctrine, definition of, 179 legal realism, 128; definition of, 179 legal research tools, as hindrances to law reform, 32–­34 legal storytelling and narrative, 11, 46–­56; in court, 54–­55; critique of, 55–­56; definition of, 179; interpretations of, 45–­47; power of, 52–­54; use of, 46–­47, 52–­54. See also counterstorytelling; narratives and narrative theory legitimacy, definition of, 179 lesbian legal theory. See gay/lesbian (LGBT) or queer legal theory Levit, Nancy, 6 LGBT legal theory. See gay/lesbian (LGBT) or queer legal theory liberalism: critique of, 22, 26–­31, 65–­66; definition of, 179 look-­to-­the-­bottom strategy, 27 López, Gerald, 6 López, Ian Haney. See Haney López, Ian

Delgado_CRT_4th_Ed.indd 194

Lowell High School (San Francisco, Calif.), and admissions, 84 LSAT (Law School Admissions Test), 135, 137–­138, 146; and stereotype threat, 146 Lyotard, Jean-­François, 53–­54 majoritarianism, definition of, 179 Manifest Destiny, definition of, 179 maquiladoras, 139; definition of, 179 marketplace of ideas, definition of, 179 Martinez, George, 53 Marxism, definition of, 180 material determinism, 9, 20–­24; definition of, 180. See also interest convergence materialists: and nationalism, 68–­69; and revisionist history, 25; and strategies for law reform, 25, 143; and white self-­interest, 22 Matsuda, Mari, xv, 6, 107, 129, 159 McIntosh, Peggy, and white privilege, 90 melting pot, definition of, 180 merit: critique of, 102–­104, 135; definition of, 180 mestizos/mestizas, definition of, 180 Mexican Americans: and box checking, 83; effect of U.S. war with Mexico on, 81; and other white policy, 82, 83 microaggressions, 1–­3, 148; definition of, 180 Middle Easterners, 4, 54, 117, 141; stereotypes of, 10, 54 migrant worker, definition of, 180 mindset, 51, 77; definition of, 180 minority middle managers, 83, 157. See also broker class miscegenation, definition of, 180 mixed race. See multiracial model minority myth, 94; definition of, 180 Monteiro v. Tempe Union High School District, 40

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Index | 195

Montoya, Margaret, 6 moral panic, 112–­113 multiculturalism, definition of, 181 multiple consciousness, 63–­64; definition of, 181 multiracial: and the Census, 72, 144; definition of, category, 181; definition of, person, 181; identity, 72, 141, 152–­153 Muslims, animus against, 4, 24, 82, 117 NAACP: and Korematsu v. United States, 83; Legal Defense Fund and Brown, 22 NAFTA, 138–­139; definition of, 181 narratives and narrative theory, 35–­36, 45–­55; in court, 54–­55; and the differend, 53–­54; and mindset, 51. See also legal storytelling and narrative national security, 141 nationalism, 66–­70; black, 66–­68; definition of, 181; Latino, 68–­69 nativism, 93; definition of, 181 naturalization: definition of, 181; and race cases, 86–­89 negrophobe, definition of, 181 neocolonialism, definition of, 181 nomos, and narrative theory, 50 normative, definition of, 181 Obama, Barack (Pres.), xix, 24, 26, 31, 53, 89, 104 one-­drop rule, definition of, 182 Onwuachi-­Willig, Angela, 6 Operation Wetback, definition of, 182 oppression: economic, 13; hydra of, 91; and implicit bias, 147; and intersectionality, 60–­63; and social change, 64–­65; and social dominance theory, 148; and stereotype threat, 146; and voice of color, 11. See also discrimination Ozawa. See Takao Ozawa v. United States

Delgado_CRT_4th_Ed.indd 195

paradigm: black-­white, 77–­84; definition of, 182; shift, 52–­53 passing, 85, 93, 108; definition of, 182 patriarchy, definition of, 182 People ex rel. Joan Gallo v. Acuna, 123–­124 Perea, Juan, 6, 107 performative identity, 74, 164 perspectivalism: definition of, 182; and intersectionality, 62; and white transparency, 91 plenary power doctrine, and immigration, 140; definition of, 182 Plessy v. Ferguson, 26–­27, 82, 133 police and policing, 122–­123, 129; and community relations, 127; and probable cause laws, 93; racial profiling by, 62, 123–­125, 141 politics of identification and respectability, 63; definition of, 182 populist movement, definition of, 182 Posner, Judge Richard: and critique of legal storytelling, 55; and paradigm shifts, 52–­53; and racial preferences, 29 postcolonial studies, and globalization, 140 postmodernism, definition of, 183 postracial, 26, 31, 104, 117; definition of, 183 poststructuralism, definition of, 183 poverty, 117–­122; intersection of race and, 121–­122 power: between lawyer and client, 37–­38, 54–­55 prejudice, definition of, 183 principle of involuntary sacrifice, definition of, 183 prisons and prison building, 126 privilege, definition of, 183 profiling, definition of, 183. See also driving while black; racial profiling property interest in whiteness, 86; definition of, 183

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196 | Index

public-­private distinction, definition of, 183 push-­pull theory of migration, definition of, 184 queer-­crit or queer legal theory. See gay/lesbian (LGBT) or queer legal theory race traitor, definition of, 184 race, 50–­51; biological view of, 168; and black-­white binary, 77–­84; and body image, 145; and class, 118–­122; definition of, 184; intersection of, and poverty, 121; social construction of, 9, 21, 186; race traitor, definition of, 184 racial depiction. See stereotype(s) racial epithets. See hate speech racial fraud and box checking, definition of, 184. See also box checking racial insults, 26, 80; and emotional distress, 80, 126–­127. See also hate speech racial profiling, 62, 123–­125, 141 racial progress and retrenchment, 80–­85 racial realism, 20–­24; definition of, 184. See also interest convergence racial reform: and conservatives, 30–­ 31; strategies for, 25–­26, 65–­66 racialization, definition of, 184. See also differential racialization racism: and beggar story, 19–­20; color-­ blind remedies for, 8–­9, 26–­28; definition of, 184; and innocence, 91–­92; kinds of, 31–­32; and microaggressions, 1–­3, 148; ordinariness of, 8; quantity of, 11–­13 realists. See materialists; racial realism reasonable racist, definition of, 184 Reconstruction, definition of, 185 redistricting, definition of, 185

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redlining, definition of, 185 Regents of University of California v. Bakke. See Bakke, Allan reparations, 53; definition of, 185 replacement theory, 89 restrictive covenants, definition of, 185 reverse discrimination, 91; definition of, 185. See also affirmative action revisionist history, 25–­26; definition of, 185 rights: critique of, 29–­30, definition of, 172 Rosen, Jeffrey, and critique of critical race theory, 54 Ross, Tom, 6 Rufo, Christopher, 104–­105 Ruiz v. Hall, 131 rule of law, definition of, 185 Samaha v. Wash. St. Dept. of Tran., 147 Sander, Richard, and critique of affirmative action, 136 SAT (Scholastic Aptitude Test), 118, 135 segregation, definition of, 185 sentencing guidelines, 125 separate but equal, 132; definition of, 185 separatism, definition of, 186 . See also nationalism serving two masters, 37–­38 Shelby County v. Holder, 142–­143 Sherry, Suzanna, and critique of critical race theory, 55, 102–­104 Sidanius, Jim, and social dominance theory, 148 silencing: cure for, 52–­54, 66; definition of, 186 Simpson, O. J., verdict, 54 social construction of race. See race: social construction of social dominance theory, 148

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Index | 197

social justice. See racial reform social well-­being of minority groups, 12–­13 standardized testing: and class, 118; critique of, 118, 135 standing, definition of, 186 State v. Buggs, 50–­51 statistical racism, definition of, 186 status quo, definition of, 186 Steele, Claude, and stereotype threat, 146 Stefancic, Jean, xvi, 6 stereotype threat, 146; definition of, 186 stereotype(s): definition of, 186; of racial groups, 10, 34, 54, 94, 146 stigmatization, definition of, 186 stock stories: about African Americans, 51; definition of, 186. See also legal storytelling and narrative stories and storytelling. See legal storytelling and narrative structural determinism, 31–­40; definition of, 187 subordination, definition of, 187 sweatshop, 139; definition of, 187 Takao Ozawa v. United States, 88 Taylor v. Metzger, 26, 80, 129 Tea Party movement, xix, 89, 117 terra nullius, definition of, 187 “three-­strikes-­and-­you’re-­out case,” 125–­126 Title VII, definition of, 187 Trail of Tears, definition of, 187 transparency: definition of, 187; of whiteness, 91–­92 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, 93 triangulation, politics of, 117 tribal sovereignty, definition of, 187 triumphalism, critique of, 5 Trump, Donald J. (Pres.), 102, 105 Tucson, Arizona: Latino studies program banned, 69

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Tushnet, Mark, and critique of legal storytelling, 55 U.S. Department of Justice, and school desegregation, 23–­24 U.S. Department of State, and race relations, 23 unconscious racism, definition of, 187 undocumented worker, definition of, 187 United Nations, and index of social wellbeing, 13 United States of America v. Leviner, 125–­126 United States: demographics of, xix, 154–­155; effect of economic downturn on minorities in, 115–­116; immigration policy of, 140; and war with Mexico, 81 University of California at Berkeley, and admissions, 84 University of California at Davis Medical School, and affirmative action, 133–­134 University of Chicago, xiii–­xv Valdes, Francisco, 6 vigilante, definition of, 188 Virginia v. Black, 162 voice: of color, 11, 102; definition of, 188 voting, 142–­143; cumulative, 142, 159; and felon disenfranchisement, 127, 142, 157; and stringent requirements, 142–­143 WASP, definition of, 188 wealth gap, 13, 121 Weinstein, Judge Jack B., and empathy, 36 welfare, 121 white collar crime, 52, 123 white privilege, 90–­92; definition of, 188; and standardized testing, 118, 137–­138

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198 | Index

white studies. See critical white studies white(s): identification of other groups with, 82, 83; and Plessy v. Ferguson, 27; supremacy groups, 89 White, Lucy, and stories in clinical lawyering, 54 whiteness: definition of, 188; and immigrant groups, 86–­89; and innocence, 85–­86, 91–­92; legal definition of,

Delgado_CRT_4th_Ed.indd 198

87–­88; normativity of, 86, 91; as a property interest, 86, 188 white-­supremacist groups, 89 Wildman, Stephanie, 6 Williams, Patricia, xv, 6, 45 Williams, Robert, 6, 160 Wittmer v. Peters, 29 woke, definition of, 188 Yamamoto, Eric, 6 Yoshino, Kenji, 74

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ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Richard Delgado is John J. Sparkman Chair of Law at the University of Alabama and one of the founders of critical race theory. His books include The Latino/a Condition: A Critical Reader (coedited with Jean Stefancic; New York University Press) and The Rodrigo Chronicles (New York University Press). Jean Stefancic is Professor and Clement Research Affiliate at the University of Alabama School of Law. Her books include No Mercy: How Conservative Think Tanks and Foundations Changed America’s Social Agenda. She and Delgado edited Critical Race Theory: The Cutting Edge.

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